2006MNRAS.369..529F


Query : 2006MNRAS.369..529F

2006MNRAS.369..529F - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 369, 529-566 (2006/June-3)

The SAURON project - VII. Integral-field absorption and emission-line kinematics of 24 spiral galaxy bulges.

FALCON-BARROSO J., BACON R., BUREAU M., CAPPELLARI M., DAVIES R.L., DE ZEEUW P.T., EMSELLEM E., FATHI K., KRAJNOVIC D., KUNTSCHNER H., McDERMID R.M., PELETIER R.F. and SARZI M.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present observations of the stellar and gas kinematics for a representative sample of 24 Sa galaxies obtained with our custom-built integral-field spectrograph SAURON operating on the William Herschel Telescope. The data have been homogeneously reduced and analysed by means of a dedicated pipeline. All resulting data cubes were spatially binned to a minimum mean signal-to-noise ratio of 60 per spatial and spectral resolution element. Our maps typically cover the bulge-dominated region. We find a significant fraction of kinematically decoupled components (12/24), many of them displaying central velocity dispersion minima. They are mostly aligned and co-rotating with the main body of the galaxies, and are usually associated with dust discs and rings detected in unsharp-masked images. Almost all the galaxies in the sample (22/24) contain significant amounts of ionized gas which, in general, is accompanied by the presence of dust. The kinematics of the ionized gas are consistent with circular rotation in a disc co-rotating with respect to the stars. The distribution of mean misalignments between the stellar and gaseous angular momenta in the sample suggests that the gas has an internal origin. The [Oiii]/Hβ ratio is usually very low, indicative of current star formation, and shows various morphologies (ring-like structures, alignments with dust lanes or amorphous shapes). The star formation rates (SFRs) in the sample are comparable with that of normal disc galaxies. Low gas velocity dispersion values appear to be linked to regions of intense star formation activity. We interpret this result as stars being formed from dynamically cold gas in those regions. In the case of NGC5953, the data suggest that we are witnessing the formation of a kinematically decoupled component from cold gas being acquired during the ongoing interaction with NGC5954.

Abstract Copyright: 2006 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2006 RAS

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: bulges - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: formation - galaxies: kinematics and dynamics - galaxies: ISM - galaxies: spiral

Simbad objects: 41

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Number of rows : 41
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 1056 Sy2 02 42 48.2914236192 +28 34 26.660028468   13.5       ~ 168 0
2 NGC 1097 LIN 02 46 19.059 -30 16 29.68 10.46 9.97 9.48 8.72 9.8 ~ 1342 3
3 NGC 2273 Sy2 06 50 08.6691789600 +60 50 44.864645136   14.50 13.54     ~ 527 3
4 NGC 2844 GiG 09 21 48.0170367528 +40 09 04.472982288   13.6       ~ 125 0
5 NGC 2852 GiP 09 23 14.6019569160 +40 09 49.759151868   14.0       ~ 69 0
6 NGC 2853 GiP 09 23 17.3601784296 +40 12 00.171268092   14.6       ~ 42 0
7 M 65 GiP 11 18 55.9084654776 +13 05 32.300703672   9.6       ~ 445 1
8 NAME Leo Triplet IG 11 19 +13.2           ~ 124 1
9 M 66 GiP 11 20 15.0 +12 59 29 9.85 9.65 8.92     ~ 1386 4
10 NGC 3628 GiP 11 20 17.018 +13 35 22.16   10.42 9.48 9.22   ~ 827 3
11 NGC 4218 GiP 12 15 46.1787155088 +48 07 52.628679084   13.2       ~ 90 0
12 NGC 4220 GiP 12 16 11.7271475400 +47 53 00.116701188   12.4       ~ 153 0
13 NGC 4235 Sy1 12 17 09.8818997904 +07 11 29.673389004   14.70 13.60     ~ 411 0
14 NGC 4245 GiG 12 17 36.7836585312 +29 36 28.898544204   12.4       ~ 179 0
15 NGC 4246 LIN 12 17 58.1198003208 +07 11 09.327638508   14.0       ~ 103 0
16 NGC 4274 LIN 12 19 50.5930710456 +29 36 53.238538764 11.78 11.34 10.41     ~ 248 1
17 NGC 4293 LIN 12 21 12.891 +18 22 56.64   11.6       ~ 291 2
18 NGC 4314 LIN 12 22 32.0223000912 +29 53 43.814812200 11.72 11.43 10.58     ~ 479 1
19 NGC 4369 GiG 12 24 36.204 +39 22 58.73   12.3       ~ 189 1
20 NGC 4383 AGN 12 25 25.5 +16 28 12 12.41 12.67 12.12     ~ 252 1
21 NGC 4405 H2G 12 26 07.1372151528 +16 10 51.581577504   13.03       ~ 157 1
22 NGC 4425 GiG 12 27 13.3361738592 +12 44 05.190746352 13.12 12.73 11.83     ~ 187 1
23 NGC 4596 GiP 12 39 55.9544722920 +10 10 34.185047628   12.4       ~ 366 0
24 NGC 4698 Sy2 12 48 22.9082830584 +08 29 14.667552276   13.24 12.27     ~ 483 0
25 NGC 4772 LIN 12 53 29.1636448512 +02 10 06.146331708 12.29 11.96 11.04     ~ 253 1
26 NGC 5448 LIN 14 02 50.072 +49 10 21.53   12.7       ~ 162 0
27 NGC 5475 GiG 14 05 12.4060318056 +55 44 30.694106112   13.4       ~ 100 0
28 NGC 5636 GiP 14 29 39.0108829368 +03 15 58.704040548   13.70       ~ 66 1
29 NGC 5638 GiP 14 29 40.3717451400 +03 13 59.987811648 12.57 12.14 11.20     ~ 243 2
30 NGC 5682 GiP 14 34 44.963 +48 40 12.93   15.1       ~ 97 0
31 NGC 5689 GiP 14 35 29.7025058208 +48 44 29.759376048   12.7       ~ 125 0
32 NGC 5693 GiP 14 36 11.151 +48 35 04.31   14.5       ~ 77 0
33 NGC 5953 GiP 15 34 32.4 +15 11 38   13.23 12.45     ~ 370 1
34 NGC 5954 GiP 15 34 35.175 +15 11 53.67   13.7       ~ 174 0
35 NGC 5983 GiG 15 42 45.6350364384 +08 14 28.001974200   15.1       ~ 22 0
36 NGC 6467 GiG 17 50 40.173 +17 32 16.33   14.5       ~ 35 0
37 NGC 6495 GiG 17 54 50.7755269728 +18 19 36.669498852   13.8       ~ 56 0
38 UGC 11037 AG? 17 55 05.427 +18 15 26.76   16.0       ~ 16 0
39 NGC 6500 LIN 17 55 59.78218885 +18 20 17.6673590   13.43 12.54     ~ 220 0
40 NGC 6501 GiP 17 56 03.7387070789 +18 22 22.933662437   13.4       ~ 74 0
41 NGC 7742 GiP 23 44 15.7534099368 +10 46 01.533226872   12.5       ~ 212 0

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