Bibcode
Borlaff, A.; Eliche-Moral, M. Carmen; Beckman, J. E.; Font, J.
Referencia bibliográfica
Formation and Evolution of Galaxy Outskirts, Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, IAU Symposium, Volume 321, pp. 272-272
Fecha de publicación:
3
2017
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
Previous studies have discarded that flares in galactic discs may
explain the truncation that are frequently observed in highly-inclined
galaxies (Kregel et al. 2002). However, no study has systematically
analysed this hypothesis using realistic models for the disc, the flare
and the bulge. We derive edge-on and face-on surface brightness profiles
for a series of realistic galaxy models with flared discs that sample a
wide range of structural and photometric parameters across the Hubble
Sequence, accordingly to observations. The surface brightness profile
for each galaxy model has been simulated for edge-on and face-on views
to find out whether the flared disc produces a significant truncation in
the disc in the edge-on view compared to the face-on view or not. In
order to simulate realistic images of disc galaxies, we have considered
the observational distribution of the photometric parameters as a
function of the morphological type for three mass bins (10 <
log10(M/M ⊙) < 10.7, 10.7 <
log10(M/M ⊙) < 11 and log10(M/M
⊙) > 11), and four morphological type bins (S0-Sa,
Sb-Sbc, Sc-Scd and Sd-Sdm). For each mass bin, we have restricted the
photometric and structural parameters of each modelled galaxy to their
characteristic observational ranges (μ0, disc,
μeff, bulge, B/T, M abs, r eff, n
bulge, h R, disc) and the flare in the disc (h
z, disc/h R, disc, ∂h z,
disc/∂R, see de Grijs & Peletier 1997, Graham 2001,
López-Corredoira et al. 2002, Yoachim & Dalcanton 2006,
Bizyaev et al. 2014, Mosenkov et al. 2015).
Contrary to previous claims, the simulations show that realistic flared
disks can be responsible for the truncations observed in many edge-on
systems, preserving the profile of the non-flared analogous model in
face-on view. These breaks reproduce the properties of the
weak-to-intermediate breaks observed in many real Type-II galaxies in
the diagram relating the radial location of the break (R
brkII) in units of the inner disk scale-length with the break
strength S (Laine et al. 2014). Radial variation of the scale-height of
the disc (flaring) can explain the existence of many breaks in edge-on
galaxies, especially of those with low break strengths
10\frac{ho}{hi} \sim \ [-0.3,-0.1]$ .