Bulgeless Giant Galaxies Challenge our Picture of Galaxy Formation by Hierarchical Clustering

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics – Galaxy Astrophysics

Scientific paper

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

28 pages, 16 Postscript figures, 2 tables; requires emulateapj.sty and apjfonts.sty; accepted for publication in ApJ; for a ve

Scientific paper

We dissect giant Sc-Scd galaxies with Hubble Space Telescope photometry and Hobby-Eberly Telescope spectroscopy. We use HET's High Resolution Spectrograph (resolution = 15,000) to measure stellar velocity dispersions in the nuclear star clusters and pseudobulges of the pure-disk galaxies M33, M101, NGC 3338, NGC 3810, NGC 6503, and NGC 6946. We conclude: (1) Upper limits on the masses of any supermassive black holes are MBH <= (2.6+-0.5) * 10**6 M_Sun in M101 and MBH <= (2.0+-0.6) * 10**6 M_Sun in NGC 6503. (2) HST photometry shows that the above galaxies contain tiny pseudobulges that make up <~ 3 % of the stellar mass but no classical bulges. We inventory a sphere of radius 8 Mpc centered on our Galaxy to see whether giant, pure-disk galaxies are common or rare. In this volume, 11 of 19 galaxies with rotation velocity > 150 km/s show no evidence for a classical bulge. Four may contain small classical bulges that contribute 5-12% of the galaxy light. Only 4 of the 19 giant galaxies are ellipticals or have classical bulges that contribute 1/3 of the galaxy light. So pure-disk galaxies are far from rare. It is hard to understand how they could form as the quiescent tail of a distribution of merger histories. Recognition of pseudobulges makes the biggest problem with cold dark matter galaxy formation more acute: How can hierarchical clustering make so many giant, pure-disk galaxies with no evidence for merger-built bulges? This problem depends strongly on environment: the Virgo cluster is not a puzzle, because >2/3 of its stellar mass is in merger remnants.

No associations

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for scientists and scientific papers. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Bulgeless Giant Galaxies Challenge our Picture of Galaxy Formation by Hierarchical Clustering does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this scientific paper.

If you have personal experience with Bulgeless Giant Galaxies Challenge our Picture of Galaxy Formation by Hierarchical Clustering, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Bulgeless Giant Galaxies Challenge our Picture of Galaxy Formation by Hierarchical Clustering will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFWR-SCP-O-26674

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.