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A&A 388, 809-825 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020541
Dark and luminous matter in the NGC 3992 group of galaxies
II. The dwarf companions UGC 6923, UGC 6940, UGC 6969, and the Tully-Fisher relation
R. BottemaKapteyn Astronomical Institute, PO Box 800, 9700 AV Groningen, The Netherlands
(Received 24 July 2001 / Accepted 8 April 2002)
Abstract
Detailed neutral hydrogen observations have been obtained of
the large barred spiral galaxy NGC 3992 and its three small companion
spiral galaxies, UGC 6923, UGC 6940, and UGC 6969.
Contrary to the large galaxy, for the companions the H I distribution
ends quite abruptly at the optical edges. Velocity fields have
been constructed from which rotation curves have been derived.
Assuming a reasonable
M/L ratio, a decomposition
of these rotation curves generates nearly equal dark matter halos.
When comparing the position-velocity diagrams of the two
brightest galaxies, UGC 6923 and UGC 6969, it is obvious
that the rotation curve of the latter has a shape closer to
solid body than the former, yet the same maximum rotational
level is reached. This is likely generated by the equal dark matter
halos in combination with UGC 6923 being
a factor five more luminous than UGC 6969 and so its luminous
matter gives a higher contribution to the rotation in
the inner regions. An NFW-CDM
dark halo is consistent
with the observed rotation curve of UGC 6923 but not consistent
with the rotation curve of UGC 6969.
If the NGC 3992 group is part of the Ursa Major cluster, then
the
I-band
M/L ratio of NGC 3992 has to be at least 1.35 times as large
as that of the average spiral galaxy in the cluster.
On the other hand, equal
M/L ratios can be achieved when
the NGC 3992 group is placed more than 3 Mpc behind the cluster.
Both possibilities can explain why NGC 3992 appears to be 0.43 mag too faint for its rotation.
Key words: galaxies: individual: NGC 3992, UGC 6923, UGC 6940, UGC 6969 -- galaxies: kinematics and -- galaxies: interactions
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2002
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