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A&A 377, 759-777 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20011046
NGC 5775: Anatomy of a disk-halo interface
S.-W. Lee1, J. A. Irwin2, R.-J. Dettmar3, C. T. Cunningham4, G. Golla3 and Q. D. Wang51 Astronomy Department, University of Toronto, 60 St. George Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3H8
2 Department of Physics, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6
e-mail: irwin@astro.queensu.ca
3 Astronomisches Institut der Ruhr-Universit
e-mail: dettmar@astro.ruhr-uni-bochum.de
4 National Research Council of Canada, Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics, 5071 West Saanich Road, Victoria, BC, Canada V9E 2E7
e-mail: charles.cunningham@nrc.ca
5 Department of Astronomy, University of Massachusetts, B-524 Lederle Graduate Research Tower, Amherst, MA, 01003, USA
e-mail: wqd@astro.umass.edu
(Received 10 October 2000 / Accepted 12 July 2001 )
Abstract
We present the first high-resolution study of the disk-halo interface
in an edge-on galaxy (NGC 5775) in which every component of the
interstellar medium is represented and resolved (though not all to the
same resolution). New single-dish CO J=2-1 and CO J=1-0 data, ROSAT
X-ray data, and HIRES IRAS data are presented along with HI data which
emphasizes the high latitude features. In conjunction with previously
published radio continuum (6 and 20 cm) and H
data, we find
spatial correlations between various ISM components in that all
components of the ISM are present in the disk-halo features (except
for CO for which there is insufficient spatial coverage). The HI
features extend to ~7 kpc above the plane, form loops in
position-position space, in one case, form a loop in position-velocity
space, and are also observed over a large velocity range. This
implies that the disk-halo features represent expanding
supershells. However, the shells may be incomplete and partially
open-topped, suggesting that we are observing the breakup of the
supershells as they traverse the disk-halo interface. There is some
evidence for acceleration with z and both redshifted and
blueshifted velocities are present, although the gas which is lagging
with respect to galactic rotation dominates. The radio continuum
spectral index is flatter around the shell rims and we show that this
cannot be due to a contribution from thermal gas but rather is due to
intrinsic flattening of the non-thermal spectral index, suggesting
that shocks may be important in these regions. The H
emission
is located interior to the HI. For feature F3, the H
emission forms the interior "skin" of the HI shell, yet there appears
to be a minimum of in-disk star formation immediately below the
feature. We present a picture of a "typical" HI supershell which
accelerates and breaks up through the disk-halo interface. Such a
feature is likely internally generated via an energetic event in the
disk.
Key words: ISM: bubbles -- ISM: general -- ISM: structure -- galaxies: general -- galaxies: individual: NGC 5775 -- galaxies: spiral
Offprint request: S.-W. Lee, swlee@astro.utoronto.ca
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2001
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