Bibcode
DOI
Laine, Seppo; Shlosman, Isaac; Knapen, Johan H.; Peletier, Reynier F.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 567, Issue 1, pp. 97-117.
Advertised on:
3
2002
Journal
Citations
304
Refereed citations
251
Description
We analyze the observed properties of nested and single stellar bar
systems in disk galaxies. The 112 galaxies in our sample comprise the
largest matched Seyfert versus non-Seyfert galaxy sample of nearby
galaxies with complete near-infrared or optical imaging sensitive to
length scales ranging from tens of parsecs to tens of kiloparsecs. The
presence of bars is deduced by fitting ellipses to isophotes in Hubble
Space Telescope (HST) H-band images up to 10" radius and in ground-based
near-infrared and optical images outside the H-band images. This is a
conservative approach that is likely to result in an underestimate of
the true bar fraction. We find that a significant fraction of the sample
galaxies, 17%+/-4%, have more than one bar, and that 28%+/-5% of barred
galaxies have nested bars. The bar fractions appear to be stable
according to reasonable changes in our adopted bar criteria. For the
nested bars, we detect a clear division in length between the
large-scale (primary) bars and small-scale (secondary) bars, in both
absolute and normalized (to the size of the galaxy) length. We argue
that this bimodal distribution can be understood within the framework of
disk resonances, specifically the inner Lindblad resonances (ILRs),
which are located where the gravitational potential of the innermost
galaxy switches effectively from three-dimensional to two-dimensional.
This conclusion is further strengthened by the observed distribution of
the sizes of nuclear rings which are dynamically associated with the
ILRs. While primary bar sizes are found to correlate with the host
galaxy sizes, no such correlation is observed for the secondary bars.
Moreover, we find that secondary bars differ morphologically from single
bars. Our matched Seyfert and non-Seyfert samples show a statistically
significant excess of bars among the Seyfert galaxies at practically all
length scales. We confirm our previous results that bars are more
abundant in Seyfert hosts than in non-Seyfert galaxies and that Seyfert
galaxies always show a preponderance of ``thick'' bars compared to the
bars in non-Seyfert galaxies. Finally, no correlation is observed
between the presence of a bar and that of companion galaxies, even
relatively bright ones. Overall, since star formation and dust
extinction can be significant even in the H band, the stellar dynamics
of the central kiloparsec cannot always be revealed reliably by the use
of near-infrared surface photometry alone.