2007MNRAS.381..401L


Query : 2007MNRAS.381..401L

2007MNRAS.381..401L - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 381, 401-417 (2007/October-2)

Properties of bars and bulges in the Hubble sequence.

LAURIKAINEN E., SALO H., BUTA R. and KNAPEN J.H.

Abstract (from CDS):

Properties of bars and bulges in the Hubble sequence are discussed, based on an analysis of 216 disc galaxies of S0-Sm types (S0s from the Near-Infrared S0 Survey and spirals from the Ohio State University Bright Spiral Galaxy Survey). For this purpose we have collected, and completed when necessary, the various analyses we have previously made separately for early- and late-type galaxies. We find strong evidence of pseudo-bulges in all Hubble types. Pseudo-bulges are disc-like structures formed by secular evolutionary processes in galaxies. Similar to spirals, the early-type disc galaxies (S0-S0/a) have on average relatively exponential bulges with Sersic index n < 2, and 56 per cent of them show disc-like fine structures in the region of the bulge. For some of the galaxies there is also kinematic evidence of pseudo-bulges. If S0-S0/a galaxies were once spirals, stripped of their gas, then redistributed gas and star formation in the disc would be a natural explanation for all pseudo-bulges in the Hubble sequence. However, it is difficult to explain how the bulges of S0 galaxies, which typically include about 30 per cent of the total galaxy mass, were formed by secularly induced central star formation. A more likely explanation is that pseudo-bulges in barred early-type galaxies are a combination of secularly induced star formation and the central steepening of the old stellar distribution. Bulges in non-barred early-type galaxies could be either classical merger-built bulges, or pseudo-bulges formed by similar processes as in barred galaxies, but in response to massive ovals or lenses (70 per cent of S0-S0/a galaxies have ovals/lenses). Observational support for the outlined picture comes from the fact that bars in early-type galaxies seem more evolved: their bars are long and massive and frequently (40 per cent) have ansae morphologies. In this scenario it would be possible also to explain why barred early-type galaxies (preferentially pseudobulges) have slightly smaller B/T flux ratios than the non-barred early-type galaxies (mostly classical bulges).

Abstract Copyright: 2007 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2007 RAS

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: structure

Simbad objects: 55

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Number of rows : 55
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 210 GiP 00 40 34.9927609368 -13 52 21.999585108   11.8   11.00 11.4 ~ 174 0
2 M 31 AGN 00 42 44.330 +41 16 07.50 4.86 4.36 3.44     ~ 12651 1
3 NGC 718 GiC 01 53 13.2842245224 +04 11 44.843164296   12.52 11.67 11.10 10.29 ~ 153 0
4 NGC 936 EmG 02 27 37.462 -01 09 22.61   11.1   9.98 10.7 ~ 357 0
5 NGC 1022 GiG 02 38 32.703 -06 40 38.60 12.33 12.09 11.34     ~ 203 1
6 NGC 1079 Sy2 02 43 44.3354434608 -29 00 11.748886668   12.17 11.37 10.86 11.5 ~ 138 0
7 NGC 1317 GiP 03 22 44.2823209512 -37 06 13.180903956 12.20 11.78 11.02 10.22   ~ 213 1
8 NGC 1326 Sy1 03 23 56.3657298384 -36 27 52.322333040 11.69 11.43 10.54 10.02 10.9 ~ 265 1
9 NGC 1350 Sy2 03 31 08.119 -33 37 43.10   11.20 10.52 9.77 10.6 ~ 182 0
10 NGC 1387 Sy2 03 36 57.0337458600 -35 30 23.675934060 12.18 11.75 10.69 10.16   ~ 262 1
11 NGC 1411 EmG 03 38 44.8916837064 -44 06 02.048427900   12.06   10.76   ~ 108 0
12 NGC 1400 EmG 03 39 30.851 -18 41 17.25 12.48 12.01 10.96 10.45   ~ 299 1
13 NGC 1415 EmG 03 40 56.8533432024 -22 33 52.235588808   12.47   11.08   ~ 121 0
14 NGC 1440 GiG 03 45 02.9199469080 -18 15 57.720365172   12.48   10.77   ~ 79 0
15 NGC 1452 GiG 03 45 22.3130329272 -18 38 01.151045340   12.98   11.06   ~ 81 0
16 NGC 1512 GiP 04 03 54.281 -43 20 55.86 11.30 11.43 10.54 10.37   ~ 396 1
17 NGC 1527 GiG 04 08 24.0893742048 -47 53 48.933087108   11.73   10.25   ~ 79 0
18 NGC 1533 EmG 04 09 51.8356041744 -56 07 06.410207352   11.77 10.92 10.27 11.0 ~ 198 0
19 NGC 1553 GiP 04 16 10.4697802536 -55 46 48.072797400 10.76 10.10 9.40 8.74   ~ 377 2
20 NGC 1574 GiG 04 21 58.7445118536 -56 58 28.407111240   11.17 10.48 9.73   ~ 125 0
21 NGC 2273 Sy2 06 50 08.6691789600 +60 50 44.864645136   14.50 13.54     ~ 527 3
22 ESO 208-21 GiG 07 33 56.2880839056 -50 26 35.057648832   12.01   10.39   ~ 80 0
23 NGC 2681 LIN 08 53 32.7183058512 +51 18 49.159212120 11.40 11.09 10.29     ~ 318 1
24 NGC 2775 AG? 09 10 20.1334093488 +07 02 16.874157048   11.417 10.481 9.920 8.994 ~ 356 0
25 NGC 2781 Sy2 09 11 27.5157906744 -14 49 00.191638668   12.5   11.38 12.0 ~ 75 0
26 NGC 2855 EmG 09 21 27.4894926552 -11 54 34.337758068   13.24 12.23 10.77   ~ 92 0
27 NGC 2859 AG? 09 24 18.5266762368 +34 30 48.561305832   11.8       ~ 256 0
28 NGC 2983 EmG 09 43 41.1170284248 -20 28 38.056081476   12.81 11.68 11.25   ~ 74 0
29 NGC 3081 Sy2 09 59 29.5437024336 -22 49 34.747341960   13.06 13.55 11.67 12.1 ~ 466 0
30 NGC 3169 GiP 10 14 15.0379414272 +03 27 57.941639856   13.46 12.41     ~ 364 1
31 NGC 3358 GiG 10 43 33.0219141120 -36 24 38.573516556   12.44 11.53 11.01 11.6 ~ 72 0
32 NGC 3583 GiP 11 14 10.979 +48 19 06.16   11.6       ~ 203 1
33 NGC 3626 GiG 11 20 03.8069651160 +18 21 24.543304164   11.2       ~ 258 0
34 NGC 3706 EmG 11 29 44.4309190968 -36 23 28.745465928   12.20 11.08 10.56   ~ 147 0
35 NGC 3810 GiG 11 40 58.7615811624 +11 28 15.808680696   11.4       ~ 335 2
36 NGC 3941 Sy2 11 52 55.3609498656 +36 59 10.716212904   11.45 11.62 9.97   ~ 244 0
37 NGC 4138 Sy2 12 09 29.8011417048 +43 41 06.864140004 12.46 12.29 11.32 10.82   ~ 410 1
38 NGC 4245 GiG 12 17 36.7836585312 +29 36 28.898544204   12.4       ~ 179 0
39 M 100 AGN 12 22 54.9299993592 +15 49 20.296257960 10.04 10.05 9.35     ~ 1847 2
40 NGC 4340 GiP 12 23 35.2816311336 +16 43 20.443217952   12.4       ~ 277 0
41 NGC 4394 GiP 12 25 55.6366312872 +18 12 50.110707636   11.9       ~ 363 0
42 NGC 4429 GiG 12 27 26.5040002440 +11 06 27.588767616   11.4       ~ 318 0
43 NGC 4450 LIN 12 28 29.5910654016 +17 05 05.976112020   10.90 10.08     ~ 564 2
44 M 58 Sy2 12 37 43.5 +11 49 06 10.80 10.48 9.66     ~ 1079 2
45 NGC 4593 Sy1 12 39 39.4435107024 -05 20 39.034988448   13.95 13.15     ~ 1090 0
46 NGC 4596 GiP 12 39 55.9544722920 +10 10 34.185047628   12.4       ~ 366 0
47 NGC 4608 GiP 12 41 13.2848464320 +10 09 20.336341500   12.6       ~ 194 0
48 NGC 4643 LIN 12 43 20.1435647088 +01 58 41.716062264   11.9       ~ 267 0
49 NGC 5005 GiP 13 10 56.312 +37 03 32.19   14.67 13.67     ~ 541 2
50 NGC 6221 Sy2 16 52 46.329 -59 13 00.99   10.90 13.45 9.68 10.4 ~ 310 0
51 NGC 7020 GiG 21 11 20.0452941264 -64 01 31.011326832   12.81 11.48 11.27   ~ 76 0
52 IC 5240 AG? 22 41 52.4120629800 -44 46 01.796119356   12.25 11.31 11.06 12.1 ~ 98 0
53 NGC 7479 Sy2 23 04 56.6432243448 +12 19 22.357387020 11.74 11.60 10.85 10.47 9.66 ~ 743 2
54 NGC 7690 AG? 23 33 02.5954925352 -51 41 54.018353580   12.93 12.01 12.19 12.6 ~ 69 0
55 NGC 7727 EmG 23 39 53.870 -12 17 34.84   11   10.55   ~ 172 0

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