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SHARC II, 350-micron continuum and archival HST J-H band maps are presented of NGC 3656, the brightest of our sample of six elliptical galaxies for which resolved CO gas disks have recently been detected with 7-spatial-resolution, interferometry mapping. These gas disks confirm the conclusions of earlier results showing optical dust lanes and unresolved CO that implied the common existence of molecular gas in ellipticals and the disk-like structure of this gas. The presented SHARC II mapping results provide the best to date resolved FIR-submm extent of NGC 3656 and of any elliptical galaxy > 40 Mpc, showing that dust of 29 K exists out to at least 1.8 kpc in this galaxy. These new data are used in conjunction with the archival HST maps and other published data to determine dust properties and associations with galactic structures, including dominant heating sources such as nuclear-activity, star-formation or diffuse-stellar radiation.
VLA neutral hydrogen observations of the shell elliptical NGC 3656 reveal an edge-on, warped minor axis gaseous disk (M_HI ~ 2.10^9 Msun) extending 7 kpc. HI is also found outside the optical image, on two complexes to the North-East and North-West t
Recently, large samples of visually classified early-type galaxies (ETGs) containing dust have been identified using space-based infrared observations with the Herschel Space Telescope. The presence of large quantities of dust in massive ETGs is pecu
We present an integral field study of the internal structure, kinematics and stellar population of the almost edge-on, intermediate luminosity ($L_ {*}$) elliptical galaxy NGC 4697. We build extended 2-dimensional (2D) maps of the stellar kinematics
We present the stellar and gaseous kinematics of an Sb galaxy, NGC 3223, with the aim of determining the vertical and radial stellar velocity dispersion as a function of radius, which can help to constrain disk heating theories. Together with the obs
At redshift z = 2, when the Universe was just three billion years old, half of the most massive galaxies were extremely compact and had already exhausted their fuel for star formation(1-4). It is believed that they were formed in intense nuclear star