Free access article
| Issue |
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A&A
Volume 418,
Number 2,
May I 2004
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Page(s)
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495 - 507 |
| Section |
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Extragalactic astronomy |
| DOI |
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10.1051/0004-6361:20034295 |
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A&A 418, 495-507 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20034295
The peculiar galaxy IC 1182: An ongoing merger?
M. Moles1, D. Bettoni2, G. Fasano2, P. Kjærgaard3, J. Varela1 and B. Milvang-Jensen4
1
Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía,
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas,
Apdo. 3004, 18080 Granada, Spain
e-mail: jesusv@imaff.cfmac.csic.es
2
Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova,
Vicolo Osservatorio 5, 35122 Padova, Italy
e-mail: bettoni;fasano@pd.astro.it
3
Copenhagen University Observatory. The Niels Bohr Institute for
Astronomy Physics and Geophysics, Juliane Maries Vej 30, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark
e-mail: per@astro.ku.dk
4
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische physik, Giessenbach str., 85748 Garching, Germany
e-mail: milvang@mpe.mpg.de
(Received 9 September 2003 / Accepted 9 February 2004 )
Abstract
High resolution broad and narrow band images and long slit spectroscopy of the peculiar galaxy IC 1182 are presented. The
analysis of the broad band images reveals a distorted morphology with a large, heavily obscured disk-like structure and several
knots in the central region. Galactic material, some of it in the form of two slender tails, is detected well beyond the main
body of the galaxy. The second, fainter tail and several knots are reported here for the first time. The galaxy has color
indices of an early type object except
U-B, which is significantly bluer than what is typical for this kind of galaxy.
The narrow band images centered on different
emission lines show that the galaxy is a very powerful emitter. Most of the knots detected in the central region and in the
prominent tail emerging eastward from the galaxy are very luminous in H

, and have typical sizes about 1 kpc (
FWHM). The emission in the main lines extends all over the galaxy, with plumes and arc-like structures seen in H

at large distances from the center. The observed, uncorrected H

flux corresponds to a total luminosity of 3.51

10
41 erg s
-1, about 3 times that of the starburst galaxy Arp 220. We have found that the internal extinction deduced from the observed
Balmer decrement is high all along the slit, with

1, so the corrected
SFR could amount to 90

per year. On this basis IC 1182 is found to be a very powerful starburst galaxy. Surprisingly, the source is not in the IRAS
Point Source Catalogue.
The emission knots detected in the central region of the galaxy have line ratios that place them close
to the border of the region occupied by active nuclei in the diagnostic diagrams. Using the best determined diagnostic ratio,
[O III]/H

vs. [N II]/H

, they can still be classified as extreme HII-like regions. We notice that the same kind of line ratios are also measured
at different places in the galaxy, adding to the idea that the nuclear line ratios can be explained in terms of stellar photoionization.
The metallicity we have measured for the ionized gas in the two brightest central knots is low, 0.1

and 0.06

respectively, and their measured helium abundance is also lower than solar.
In the main body of the galaxy, besides the reported
knots, the distribution of the ionized gas resembles that of an inclined disk about 12 kpc in size. The spectroscopic data
show however a complex rotation pattern. We interpret them as corresponding to two identifiable disk galaxies with observed
rotation amplitudes of 200 km s
-1 and 100 km s
-1 respectively. The stellar absorption lines detected in the bigger system do not show any clear rotation pattern.
The data
presented here indicate that IC 1182 is a high luminosity starburst system. Its global properties and peculiarities can be
understood as corresponding to two systems that can still be recognized, in the process of merging, with two tidal tails emerging
from the central region of the galaxy. In the main tail there are several candidates forming tidal dwarf galaxies. The measured
low metallicity of the ionized gas, together with the low amplitude of one of the systems, suggests that the process involves
a late-type, gas-rich spiral galaxy that is supplying most of the gas to the system.
Key words: galaxies: interactions
-- galaxies: starburst
-- galaxies: peculiar
-- galaxies: structure
Offprint request: M. Moles,
moles@iaa.esSIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2004
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