2013MNRAS.429..534D


Query : 2013MNRAS.429..534D

2013MNRAS.429..534D - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 429, 534-555 (2013/February-2)

The ATLAS3D project - XIV. The extent and kinematics of the molecular gas in early-type galaxies.

DAVIS T.A., ALATALO K., BUREAU M., CAPPELLARI M., SCOTT N., YOUNG L.M., BLITZ L., CROCKER A., BAYET E., BOIS M., BOURNAUD F., DAVIES R.L., DE ZEEUW P.T., DUC P.-A., EMSELLEM E., KHOCHFAR S., KRAJNOVIC D., KUNTSCHNER H., LABLANCHE P.-Y., McDERMID R.M., MORGANTI R., NAAB T., OOSTERLOO T., SARZI M., SERRA P. and WEIJMANS A.-M.

Abstract (from CDS):

We use interferometric 12CO(1-0) observations to compare and contrast the extent, surface brightness profiles and kinematics of the molecular gas in CO-rich ATLAS3D early-type galaxies (ETGs) and spiral galaxies. We find that the molecular gas extent is smaller in absolute terms in ETGs than in late-type galaxies, but that the size distributions are similar once scaled by the galaxies optical/stellar characteristic scalelengths. Amongst ETGs, we find that the extent of the gas is independent of its kinematic misalignment (with respect to the stars), but does depend on the environment, with Virgo cluster ETGs having less extended molecular gas reservoirs, further emphasizing that cluster ETGs follow different evolutionary pathways from those in the field. Approximately half of ETGs have molecular gas surface brightness profiles that follow the stellar light profile. These systems often have relaxed gas out to large radii, suggesting they are unlikely to have had recent merger/accretion events. A third of the sample galaxies show molecular gas surface brightness profiles that fall off slower than the light, and sometimes show a truncation. These galaxies often have a low mass, and either have disturbed molecular gas or are in the Virgo cluster, suggesting that recent mergers, ram pressure stripping and/or the presence of hot gas can compress/truncate the gas. The remaining galaxies have rings, or composite profiles, that we argue can be caused by the effects of bars. We investigated the kinematics of the molecular gas using position-velocity diagrams, and compared the observed kinematics with dynamical model predictions, and the observed stellar and ionized gas velocities. We confirm that the molecular gas reaches beyond the turnover of the circular velocity curve in ~70 per cent of our CO-rich ATLAS3D ETGs, validating previous work on the CO Tully-Fisher relation. In general we find that in most galaxies the molecular gas is dynamically cold, and the observed CO rotation matches well model predictions of the circular velocity. In the galaxies with the largest molecular masses, dust obscuration and/or population gradients can cause model predictions of the circular velocity to disagree with observations of the molecular gas rotation; however, these effects are confined to the most star forming systems. Bars and non-equilibrium conditions can also make the gas deviate from circular orbits. In both these cases, one expects the model circular velocity to be higher than the observed CO velocity, in agreement with our observations. Molecular gas is a better direct tracer of the circular velocity than the ionized gas, justifying its use as a kinematic tracer for Tully-Fisher and similar analyses.

Abstract Copyright: © 2012 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2012)

Journal keyword(s): ISM: evolution - ISM: kinematics and dynamics - ISM: molecules - galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD - galaxies: evolution - galaxies: ISM

Simbad objects: 77

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Number of rows : 77
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 M 31 AGN 00 42 44.330 +41 16 07.50 4.86 4.36 3.44     ~ 12645 1
2 NGC 524 GiP 01 24 47.7429545736 +09 32 20.089023900   11.5       ~ 462 1
3 M 33 GiG 01 33 50.8965749232 +30 39 36.630403128 6.17 6.27 5.72     ~ 5838 1
4 M 74 G 01 36 41.7451236624 +15 47 01.107512304 10.52 10.00 9.46 9.16   ~ 1734 1
5 M 77 Sy2 02 42 40.7091669408 -00 00 47.859690204 9.70 9.61 8.87 10.1 9.9 ~ 4601 2
6 NGC 1222 Sy2 03 08 56.7398731608 -02 57 18.587969280   13.3   13.0 13.2 ~ 193 0
7 NGC 1266 Sy1 03 16 00.7739640240 -02 25 37.827013584   14   12.46   ~ 305 1
8 IC 342 SBG 03 46 48.514 +68 05 45.98   10.5       ~ 1517 1
9 IC 2006 EmG 03 54 28.4628183240 -35 58 01.673622516   12.39   10.94 11.9 ~ 207 0
10 NGC 2697 Sy2 08 54 59.3978707968 -02 59 15.332314380   13.6       ~ 37 0
11 NGC 2685 Sy2 08 55 34.7027817000 +58 44 03.876540108   13.68 12.70     ~ 430 1
12 NGC 2764 GiG 09 08 17.5023934176 +21 26 36.007547028   13.9       ~ 119 0
13 NGC 2768 SyG 09 11 37.504 +60 02 13.95 11.30 10.84 9.87     ~ 503 2
14 NGC 2824 AGN 09 19 02.2176446256 +26 16 11.997810444   14.3       ~ 118 1
15 NGC 2905 H2G 09 32 10.111 +21 30 02.99 10.44 9.75 9.07 8.68   ~ 1116 3
16 NGC 3032 AGN 09 52 08.1524118072 +29 14 10.364182440   13.87 13.28     ~ 250 0
17 Mrk 25 AGN 10 03 51.9487763664 +59 26 10.665521556   14.96 14.42     ~ 133 0
18 2MASX J10055117+1257403 Sy2 10 05 51.1824374496 +12 57 40.722432408   15.3       ~ 62 0
19 NGC 3180 GiG 10 18 16.985 +41 25 27.77   10.4       ~ 734 0
20 NGC 3182 Sy2 10 19 33.0239134272 +58 12 20.586154752   13.0       ~ 111 0
21 M 95 GiP 10 43 57.7313485800 +11 42 13.301191332 10.71 10.51 9.73 9.48   ~ 1121 2
22 M 96 GiP 10 46 45.744 +11 49 11.78 10.42 10.15 9.25 8.99   ~ 819 1
23 NGC 3489 GiG 11 00 18.5483994744 +13 54 04.206202668 11.46 11.12 10.29     ~ 400 1
24 NGC 3521 G 11 05 48.5680991376 -00 02 09.245076540 10.06 9.83 9.02 10.1 9.6 ~ 817 2
25 Mrk 1282 GiC 11 07 24.6828148008 +21 39 25.578974664   14.8       ~ 73 0
26 IC 676 GiG 11 12 39.8140774166 +09 03 19.836734750   13.4       ~ 139 0
27 [VV2006] J111654.8+180304 QSO 11 16 54.7 +18 03 06   13.84 12.76     ~ 467 0
28 NGC 3619 GiG 11 19 21.5781353400 +57 45 28.018459368   12.6       ~ 172 0
29 NGC 3626 GiG 11 20 03.8069651160 +18 21 24.543304164   11.2       ~ 258 0
30 M 66 GiP 11 20 15.0 +12 59 29 9.85 9.65 8.92     ~ 1386 4
31 NGC 3665 rG 11 24 43.630 +38 45 46.05 13.71 13.26 11.62     ~ 344 1
32 NGC 3726 GiG 11 33 21.1367545656 +47 01 45.280222428   11.11   10.02   ~ 354 0
33 IC 719 AG? 11 40 18.4960446000 +09 00 35.742181788   13.6       ~ 122 0
34 UGC 6719 Sy2 11 44 47.0271140928 +20 07 30.227826684 14.90 14.68 13.59 13.12   ~ 92 1
35 NGC 3938 GiG 11 52 49.4335936248 +44 07 14.697085116 10.80 10.90 10.38     ~ 533 1
36 NGC 4051 Sy1 12 03 09.6101337312 +44 31 52.682601288   11.08 12.92 9.94   ~ 2165 1
37 NGC 4124 EmG 12 08 09.6312226800 +10 22 44.303673612   12.7       ~ 153 1
38 NGC 4150 GiG 12 10 33.655 +30 24 05.35 12.72 12.44 11.64     ~ 310 2
39 M 106 Sy2 12 18 57.620 +47 18 13.39   9.14 8.41 8.11   ~ 2364 3
40 NGC 4292 LIN 12 21 16.4580185256 +04 35 44.558066724 13.49 13.09 12.21     ~ 97 1
41 M 61 Sy2 12 21 54.9282582888 +04 28 25.597367184 10.07 10.18 9.65     ~ 996 2
42 M 100 AGN 12 22 54.9299993592 +15 49 20.296257960 10.04 10.05 9.35     ~ 1845 2
43 NGC 4324 GiG 12 23 06.1747492368 +05 15 01.229253372   12.5       ~ 197 0
44 NGC 4414 GiG 12 26 27.1276893168 +31 13 24.626206488 11.12 10.96 10.12     ~ 566 2
45 NAME Virgo Cluster ClG 12 26 32.1 +12 43 24           ~ 6643 0
46 NGC 4429 GiG 12 27 26.5040002440 +11 06 27.588767616   11.4       ~ 317 0
47 NGC 4435 GiG 12 27 40.503 +13 04 44.48 12.23 11.74 10.80     ~ 445 2
48 NGC 4459 H2G 12 29 00.0329905416 +13 58 42.826603332   11.6       ~ 539 0
49 NGC 4476 GiG 12 29 59.0772974472 +12 20 55.292203464 13.28 13.01 12.19     ~ 320 1
50 NGC 4477 Sy2 12 30 02.1955766304 +13 38 11.543715888 11.98 11.38 10.42     ~ 396 2
51 IRAS 12315+0758 GiG 12 34 03.029 +07 41 56.90   10.6       ~ 670 0
52 NGC 4535 H2G 12 34 20.3443516704 +08 11 51.908488116   11.1       ~ 616 0
53 NGC 4550 GiP 12 35 30.5913588048 +12 13 14.921166792 12.97 12.56 11.68     ~ 537 1
54 NGC 4559 H2G 12 35 57.6402869976 +27 57 35.859278160   10.46 10.01     ~ 628 1
55 M 90 Sy2 12 36 49.8009839880 +13 09 46.523813040 10.56 10.26 9.54     ~ 898 1
56 M 58 Sy2 12 37 43.5 +11 49 06 10.80 10.48 9.66     ~ 1078 2
57 NGC 4694 AGN 12 48 15.091 +10 59 01.05   13.93 13.36     ~ 276 0
58 NGC 4710 H2G 12 49 38.958 +15 09 55.76   11.6       ~ 310 0
59 M 94 SyG 12 50 53.0737971432 +41 07 12.900884628 9.15 8.96 8.24 7.78   ~ 1386 2
60 NGC 4753 GiG 12 52 22.112 -01 11 58.88 11.26 10.85 9.95     ~ 274 1
61 M 64 SyG 12 56 43.696 +21 40 57.57   9.36 8.52     ~ 939 2
62 NGC 5005 GiP 13 10 56.312 +37 03 32.19   14.67 13.67     ~ 541 2
63 NGC 5033 Sy2 13 13 27.535 +36 35 37.14   11.01 12.03 9.73   ~ 869 3
64 M 63 LIN 13 15 49.2741893928 +42 01 45.728076108   9.34 8.59 8.35   ~ 1224 2
65 M 51 Sy2 13 29 52.698 +47 11 42.93   9.26 8.36 8.40   ~ 4329 4
66 NGC 5248 GiG 13 37 32.0145074088 +08 53 06.496982448   11.4       ~ 508 0
67 NGC 5247 GiG 13 38 03.0183262176 -17 53 02.645511252   10.77   9.96 10.5 ~ 220 0
68 NGC 5379 GiP 13 55 34.347 +59 44 34.17   14.1       ~ 97 0
69 M 101 GiP 14 03 12.583 +54 20 55.50   8.46 7.86 7.76   ~ 2914 2
70 IC 1024 GiG 14 31 27.221 +03 00 32.78   13.87       ~ 117 1
71 UGC 9519 AG? 14 46 21.127 +34 22 14.34   14.4       ~ 96 0
72 M 102 SyG 15 06 29.561 +55 45 47.91 11.12 10.74 9.89     ~ 552 3
73 NGC 6014 AG? 15 55 57.4094044224 +05 55 55.125528852   13.8       ~ 96 0
74 Z 52-15 AG? 16 26 04.2968240808 +02 54 23.887533672   15.4       ~ 59 0
75 NGC 6946 H2G 20 34 52.332 +60 09 13.24   10.5       ~ 2527 2
76 NGC 7331 LIN 22 37 04.0506038088 +34 24 56.800076508 10.65 10.35 9.48     ~ 1227 2
77 NGC 7465 Sy2 23 02 00.9603717552 +15 57 53.236032120   13.3       ~ 303 0

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