Dynamically decoupled circumnuclear regions in barred galaxies: the panoramic spectroscopy results Moiseev A.V. (Special Astropysical Observatory, Russia) Observations A sample of barred galaxies was observed at the Russian 6m telescope with two different panoramic spectrographs: MultiPupil Fiber Spectrograph (MPFS) Field of view: 16x15'' Wavelength : 4700-6200 ÅÅ, 5800-7100 ÅÅ Results: -velocity fields and velocity dispersion maps of stars -velocity fields of the ionized gas in the Hb, [OIII] and [NII] emission lines -continuum and emission-line images Lenses/fibers unit of MPFS Scanning interferometer Fabry-Perot (IFP) in the focal reducer SCORPIO: Field of view : 5x5 arcmin Wavelength : around Ha and [NII] Results: - large-scale velocity fields of the ionized gas in the Ha and/or [NII] lines - continuum and emission-line images Russian 6m telescope BTA Multimode focal reducer SCORPIO Examples of MPFS maps: images in continuum and line-of-sight velocity fields of stars in observed galaxies See this URL for description of our devices: http://www.sao.ru/hq/lsfvo/devices.html Circumnuclear morphology Our sample contains 13 galaxies, which are candidates to double-barred galaxy. We tried to collect the maximum information about observed 2D distributions of the surface brightness and kinematic properties. For this goal, the rotation curves and radial variations of the dynamical axis position angle (PAdyn) were calculated from the velocity fields. The analysis of the morphology of the galaxies was done by means of isophote analysis of ground-based and HST images. We suggest that candidate double-barred galaxies are, in fact, galaxies with very different circumnuclear structure. It is necessary to note that the majority of the observed morphological and kinematic features in our sample galaxies may be explained without the secondary bar hypothesis. Three cases of inner polar disks, one counter-rotating gaseous disk and six nuclear disks (with and without mini-spirals) nested in large-scale bars were found in this work. The analysis of morphology observed galaxies is presented in the article by Moiseev et al. (2004). Embedded disks Inner disks ``images'' in NGC 470 (6m telescop) and NGC 5566 (HST). Left: residual brightness after subtraction of 2D model ( bulge+bar+global disks). The solid line corresponds to the galactic major axis. In a significant fraction of the galaxies inner disks nested in the central regions of the large-scale bars are found from kinematical and morphological analysis. Here we summarize the signatures indicating these inner-disk structures: Right:: deprojection of the residual brightness to the galactic plane. The gray scale is in magnitudes. The circles mark the radius of the inner disks denoted in the Table. - Photometry: an orientation (PAdyn) of the inner isophotes agrees with the PA of the line of nodes of an outer disk. - Kinematics: the central PA of the stellar velocity field lies near the line of nodes PA, that corresponds to a regular circular rotation. - Morphology: there are inner mini-spirals at distances corresponding to the nuclear disk (r<1 kpc) in NGC 2273, NGC 2681, NGC 5566, and NGC 6951. The mini-spirals also appear in the images of NGC 4736 and NGC 7743, though we cannot determine inner disks in these galaxies. The characteristic radial dependences of PAs of the dynamical axis (from velocity fields): cases of a pure bar and a circumnuclear disk: - Resonances: In the case of NGC 2681 and NGC 6951 we have shown that an inner disk region is kinematically decoupled because it lies inside the ILR of a global bar. PAdyn in stars and gas differ from the line of nodes. The difference between Hb and [OIII] measurements is caused by the shock fronts at the bar edges PAdyn coincides with line of nodes NGC 3945 Gas/stars counter-rotation in NGC 3945 Velocity fields of stars and gas (MPFS data) The velocity field of the stars in the circumnuclear disk shows a regular circular rotation. Inside the r<6'' (0.5 kpc), the line-of-sight velocities of the gas are inverted with respect to the stellar velocities. Thus, the ionized gas in the central kiloparsec of NGC 3945 rotates in the opposite direction with respect to the stellar disk. The direction of gas rotation becomes conterminous with the stellar rotation at larger distances from the nucleus. The large-scale IFP velocity field confirms the fact of normal gas rotation at large radii, up to 11kpc. According to Kuijken et al.(1996), the gaseous disks in lenticular galaxies demonstrate a counter-rotation phenomenon in 24% of all cases. This is probably attributable to a merger of an accreted gaseous cloud with the corresponding direction of angular momentum. V-band image (SCORPIO) Polar (orthogonal) inner disks DSS2 image of NGC 5850 In the circumnuclear region of NGC5850 the stellar rotation coincides with orientation of the global disk, while direction of PAdyn in the ionized gas o velocity field differs by more than 50-60 from the line of nodes PA. The radial behavior of PAdyn is typical for a disk inclined to the galactic plane. A more reasonable assumption is that the gas, at r < 7'', rotates in a polar plane with respect to the global galactic disk. In this case, the polar gaseous disk lies orthogonal to the major axis of the bar. WFPC2/HST image of NGC 3368; two ellipses delineate the orientation of the mini-bar and the circumnuclear polar dust ring. For the area outlined by a square the NIR (F110W-F160W) color map is shown in the upper right corner. (See Sil’chenko et al., 2003) A similar disk in NGC 3368 is detected on the basis of the HST morphology: the dust lane corresponds to the edge of the disk. In Sil'chenko et al. (2003) we argue that a gaseous-dust mini-disk is located in the polar plane of the bar. Velocity fields of stars and gas (MPFS data) The origin of the inner polar disk: -External: the disks could be formed by an accretion of external matter with specific orientation of the angular moment, as in ``classical'' large-scale polar rings. -Internal: the gas in the centers of these galaxies has been moved into polar orbits due to the dynamical effect of the bar, because the polar nuclear disks in NGC 3368 and NGC 5850 are orthogonal to the major axes of their bars. - It is possible that both mechanisms (internal as well as external ones) are at work. For a detailed discussion on polar mini-disks see Sil'chenko & Afanasiev (2004) and Corsini et al. (2003). Mini-spirals in the circumnuclear disks NGC 6951 is a spectacular example of a mini-disk nested in the large-scale bar. The HST image reveal a multi-armed flocculent spiral. This mini-spiral is associated only with the distribution of gas and dust rather than with the stellar component. As has been shown by Pérez et al. (2000), the nuclear spiral structure, clearly seen in the V band, completely disappears in the H band, where the effect of dust absorption is much weaker. Based on their IFP observations, Rozas et al. (2002) tried to interpret the gas non-circular motions in terms of an iner inclined disk or a dissipation of the secondary bar. However, we contradict their opinion and suggest that non-circular motions are caused by the inner spiral. Our arguments are following: - Deviations of the observed line-of-sight velocities from model of pure circular rotation reveal regular (``3-armed'') pattern in the circumnuclear disk. Left - color image of NGC 6951 combined from SCORPIO observations in three optical filters ; right - view on the central region from HST: top - color image was constructed from PC2+NICMOS frames; bottom - PC2 image after ellitical isophotes removal -Fourier analysis of the azimuthal velocity distributions shows the prevalence of the contribution of odd (1,3) harmonics into dispersion in the model of circular rotation. At the same time, in optical brightness we see invert picture: the domination of even (2,4) harmonics into the total Fourier spectrum. The same situation is also observed in spiral galaxies, where 2th spiral harmonic in brightness leads the 1th and 3th harmonics in line-ofsight velocities (see Fridman et al., 2001). IFP observations of the circumnuclear disk in NGC 6951: monochromatic Ha image, ionized gas velocity field; residual velocities after removal of pure circular model. References: Corsini, E.M., et al., 2003, A&A,408, 873 Fridman A.M., et al., 2001, A&A , 371, 538 Kuijken, K., Fisher, D., Merrifield, M.R., 1996, MNRAS, 283, 543 Moiseev, A.V., Valdés, J.R., Chavushyan, V.H., 2004, A&A, 421, 433 NGC 6951 NGC 157 (Fridman et al., 2001) The averaged contribution of the individual Fourier harmonics into dispersion in the model of pure rotation (top) and into the deviation of the brightness distribution from the azimuthal symmetry (bottom). Left - our data for NGC 6951, right - grand-design galaxy NGC 157 Pérez, E., Márquez, I., et al., 2000, A&A, 353, 893 Rozas, M., Relano, M., Zurita, A., Beckman, J.E., 2002, A&A, 386, 42 Sil’chenko, O.K., Moiseev, A.V., et al., 2003, ApJ, 591, 185 Sil’chenko, O.K. & Afanasiev, V.L., 2004, AJ, 127, 2641
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