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A multi-faceted approach is described to constrain the importance of bar-driven evolution in disk galaxies, particularly bulge formation. N-body simulations are used to construct stellar kinematic bar diagnostics for edge-on systems and to quantify the expected vertical structure of bars, and they are compared to observations of 30 edge-on spirals, most with a boxy bulge. Long-slit spectra of the galaxies show characteristic double-hump rotation curves, dispersion profiles with secondary peaks and/or flat maxima, and correlated h3 and V profiles, indicating that most of them harbor edge-on bars. The presence of cold, quasi-axisymmetric central stellar disks is also suggested, presumably formed through bar-driven gaseous inflow and star formation. K-band imaging of the same galaxies spectacularly highlights radial variations of the bars scaleheights, as expected from vertical disk instabilities. The light profiles also vary radially in shape but never approach a classic de Vaucouleurs law. Filtering of the images further isolates the specific orbit families at the origin of the boxy structure, which can be directly related to periodic orbit calculations in 3D barred potentials. Bars are thus shown to contribute substantially to the formation of both large-scale triaxial bulges and embedded central disks. Relevant results from the SAURON survey of the stellar/ionized-gas kinematics and stellar populations of spheroids are also described. Examples are used to illustrate the potential of coupling stellar kinematics and linestrengths (age and metallicity), here specifically to unravel the dynamical evolution and related chemical enrichment history of bars and bulges. [Abridged]
After presenting three ways of defining a bulge component in disc galaxies, we introduce the various types of bulges, namely the classical bulges, the boxy/peanut bulges and the disc-like bulges. We then discuss three specific topics linked to bulge
Bulges are of different types, morphologies and kinematics, from pseudo-bulges, close to disk properties (Sersic index, rotation fraction, flatenning), to classical de Vaucouleurs bulges, close to elliptical galaxies. Secular evolution and bar develo
We have obtained Integral Field Spectroscopy for 23 spiral bulges using INTEGRAL on the William Herschel Telescope and SPIRAL on the Anglo-Australian Telescope. This is the first 2D survey directed solely at the bulges of spiral galaxies. Eleven gala
We present a new class of hydrodynamical models for the formation of bulges (either massive elliptical galaxies or classical bulges in spirals) in which we implement detailed prescriptions for the chemical evolution of H, He, O and Fe. Our results hi
We present an analysis of the molecular gas distributions in the 29 barred and 15 unbarred spirals in BIMA SONG. For CO-bright galaxies, we confirm the conclusion by Sakamoto et al. (1999b) that barred spirals have higher molecular gas concentrations