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A&A 421, 433-453 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20040045
Structure and kinematics of candidate double-barred galaxies
A. V. Moiseev1, J. R. Valdés2 and V. H. Chavushyan21 Special Astrophysical Observatory, Nizhnij Arkhyz, Karachaevo-Cherkesia, 369167, Russia
2 Instituto Nacional de Astrofísica Optica y Electrónica, Apartado Postal 51 y 216, CP 72000, Puebla, Pue., México
(Received 27 January 2003 / Accepted 21 January 2004)
Abstract
Results of optical and NIR spectral and photometric observations
of a sample of candidate double-barred galaxies are presented.
Velocity fields and velocity dispersion maps of stars and ionized
gas, continuum and emission-line images were constructed from
integral-field spectroscopy observations carried out at the 6 m
telescope (BTA) of SAO RAS, with the MPFS spectrograph and the
scanning Fabry-Perot Interferometer.
NGC 2681
was also observed
with the long-slit spectrograph of the BTA. Optical and NIR
images were obtained at the BTA and at the 2.1 m telescope (OAN,
México). High-resolution images were retrieved from the HST
data archive. Morphological and kinematic features of all 13
sample objects are described in detail. Attention is focused on
the interpretation of observed non-circular motions of gas and
stars in circumnuclear (one kiloparsec-scale) regions. We have
shown first of all that these motions are caused by the
gravitational potential of a large-scale bar.
NGC 3368
and
NGC 3786
have nuclear bars only, their isophotal twist at larger
radii being connected with the bright spiral arms. Three cases of
inner polar disks in our sample (
NGC 2681
,
NGC 3368
and
NGC 5850
) are considered. We found ionized-gas counter-rotation
in the central kiloparsec of the lenticular galaxy
NGC 3945
.
Seven galaxies (
NGC 470
,
NGC 2273
,
NGC 2681
,
NGC 3945
,
NGC 5566
,
NGC 5905
, and
NGC 6951
) have inner mini-disks nested in
large-scale bars. Minispiral structures occur often in these
nuclear disks. It is interesting that the majority of the
observed, morphological and kinematical, features in the sample
galaxies can be explained without the secondary bar hypothesis.
Thus we suggest that a dynamically independent secondary bar is a
rarer phenomenon than follows from isophotal analysis of the
images only.
Key words: galaxies: kinematics and dynamics -- galaxies: spiral -- techniques: spectroscopic
Offprint request: A. V. Moiseev, moisav@sao.ru
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2004
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