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Box/Peanut Galaxies in the Near-IR

Authors :
S. M. Baggett
J. W. MacKenty
Source :
International Astronomical Union Colloquium. 157:224-226
Publication Year :
1996
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 1996.

Abstract

Galaxies with box/peanut-shaped (b/p) bulges have been known for some time (e.g., NGC 128 and NGC 7332 (Sandage 1961)). Observationally, b/p features are detected in edge-on systems, and are visible in images, contour maps, and brightness profiles as isophote sections that near minor axis are relatively flat and parallel to major axis (see Figure 1). Peanut-type bulges have isophotes indented at the intersection with the minor axis.There have been several morphological surveys to date. The two most recent studies have found that about 20% of early-type galaxies and nearly 45% of all disk galaxies are b/p galaxies (see Shaw 1987, Dettmar 1989, and references therein) and that the b/p galaxy properties appear similar to normal spirals in the optical, radio, and infrared. A few kinematical studies have been done: b/p bulges are found to rotate more like disks than bulges (e.g., 150 km s−1 up to 6 kpc above the plane in NGC 128 (Jarvis 1990) and the velocities remain constant up to large z, implying cylindrical rotation (e.g., NGC 3079 has v constant out to 1.6 kpc (Shaw et al. 1993)).

Subjects

Subjects :
Physics
Astrophysics
Galaxy

Details

ISSN :
02529211
Volume :
157
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Astronomical Union Colloquium
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........30be34d9cd7033ca75afaae4dbdccb25