Kinematics of NGC 4826: A Sleeping Beauty Galaxy, not an Evil Eye
Abstract
A recent high resolution H I study of the Sab galaxy NGC 4826 [Braun et al. Nature, 360,442(1992)] reveals that the sense of rotation of the neutral gas reverses from the inner to the outer disk. The present paper reports on optical spectra at high velocity resolution in four position angles in NGC 4826, which cover the region of the gas reversal and which reveal a high degree of complexity. In the inner disk, which includes the prominent dusty lane, the stars and gas rotate in concert, and the spiral arms trail (for the adopted geometry). Arcs of ionized gas are observed partially encircling the nucleus; expansion velocities reach 400 km/s. At distances just beyond the prominent dust lane, the ionized gas exhibits a rapid, orderly velocity fall and within 500 parsecs it has reversed from 180 km/s prograde to 200 km/s retrograde; it also has a component radial toward the nucleus of over 100 km/s. The stars, however, continue their prograde rotation. Beyond this transition zone, the neutral gas continues its retrograde rotation, stellar velocities are prograde, but the sense of the almost circular arms is not established. Because of its kinematical complexity as well as its proximity, NGC 4826 is an excellent early-type galaxy in which to observe the long term effects of gas acquisition or a galaxy merger on a disk galaxy.
- Publication:
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The Astronomical Journal
- Pub Date:
- January 1994
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1994AJ....107..173R
- Keywords:
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- Disk Galaxies;
- Emission Spectra;
- Galactic Rotation;
- H I Regions;
- Ionized Gases;
- Kinematics;
- Neutral Gases;
- Astronomical Spectroscopy;
- Cosmic Dust;
- Galactic Structure;
- Spectrum Analysis;
- Spiral Galaxies;
- Velocity Distribution;
- Astrophysics;
- GALAXIES: INDIVIDUAL: NGC 4826;
- GALAXIES: KINEMATICS AND DYNAMICS