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Polar bulges and polar nuclear discs: the case of NGC 4698

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 08:04 authored by EM Corsini, J Ḿendez-Abreu, N Pastorello, E Dalla Bontà, L Morelli, A Beifiori, A Pizzella, F Bertola
The early-type spiral NGC 4698 is known to host a nuclear disc of gas and stars which is rotating perpendicularly with respect to the galaxy main disc. In addition, the bulge and main disc are characterized by a remarkable geometrical decoupling. Indeed, they appear elongated orthogonally to each other. In this work, the complex structure of the galaxy is investigated by a detailed photometric decomposition of optical and near-infrared images. The intrinsic shape of the bulge was constrained from its apparent ellipticity, its twist angle with respect to the major axis of the main disc and the inclination of the main disc. The bulge is actually elongated perpendicular to the main disc and it is equally likely to be triaxial or axisymmetric. The central surface brightness, scalelength, inclination and position angle of the nuclear disc were derived by assuming that it is infinitesimally thin and exponential. Its size, orientation and location do not depend on the observed passband. These findings support a scenario in which the nuclear disc is the end result of the acquisition of external gas by the pre-existing triaxial bulge on the principal plane perpendicular to its shortest axis and perpendicular to the galaxy main disc. The subsequent star formation either occurred homogeneously all over the extension of the nuclear disc or through an inside-out process that ended more than 5 Gyr ago.

History

Journal

Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: letters

Volume

423

Pagination

L79-L83

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1745-3933

Language

eng

Publication classification

CN.1 Other journal article

Copyright notice

2012, RAS

Issue

1

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell