Observational Constraints on Disk Heating as a Function of Hubble Type
Preprint
- 28 August 2003
Abstract
Current understanding of the secular evolution of galactic disks suggests that this process is dominated by two or more heating mechanisms, which increase the random motions of stars in the disk. In particular, the gravitational influence of giant molecular clouds and irregularities in the spiral potential have been proposed to explain the observed velocity dispersions in the solar neighborhood. Each of these mechanisms acts on different components of the stellar velocities, which affects the ratio of the vertical and radial components of the stellar velocity dispersion since the relative strengths of giant molecular clouds and spiral irregularities vary with Hubble type. A study of this ratio as function of Hubble type has the potential to provide strong constraints on disk heating mechanisms. We present major and minor axis stellar kinematics for four spiral galaxies of Hubble type from Sa to Sbc, and use the data to infer the ratios sigma_z/sigma_R in the galaxy disks. The results combined with two galaxies studied previously and with Milky Way data show that the ratio is generally in the range 0.5 - 0.8. There is a marginally significant trend of decreasing ratio with advancing Hubble type, consistent with the predictions of disk heating theories. However, the errors on individual measurements are large, and the absence of any trend is consistent with the data at the 1-sigma level. As a byproduct of our study, we find that three of the four galaxies in our sample have a central drop in their stellar line-of-sight velocity dispersion, a phenomenon that is increasingly observed in spiral galaxies. [ABRIDGED]Keywords
All Related Versions
- Version 1, 2003-08-28, ArXiv
- Published version: The Astronomical Journal, 126 (6), 2707.
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