The striking near-infrared morphology of the inner region in M100
Open Access
- 1 April 1995
- journal article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 443, L73-L76
- https://doi.org/10.1086/187839
Abstract
New optical and NIR K-band images of the inner 3 kpc region of the nearby Virgo spiral M100 (NGC 4321) display remarkable morphological changes with wavelength. While in the optical the light is dominated by a circumnuclear zone of enhanced star formation, the features in the 2.2mum image correspond to a newly discovered kpc-size stellar bar, and a pair of leading arms situated inside an ovally-shaped region. Only 5% of the K flux is emitted in antisymmetric structures. This indicates that the morphology seen in the NIR is dominated by a global density wave. Making a first-order correction for the presence of localized dust extinction in K using the I-K image, we find that the observed leading arm morphology is slightly hidden by dust. Possible mechanisms responsible for the optical and NIR morphology are discussed, and tests are proposed to discriminate between them. Conclusions are supported with an evolutionary stellar population model reproducing the optical and NIR colors in a number of star forming zones. We argue that this morphology is compatible with the presence of a pair of inner Lindblad resonances in the region, and show this explicitly in an accompanying paper by detailed numerical modeling. The observed phenomena may provide insight into physical processes leading to central activity in galaxies.Comment: 8 pages: postscript,compressed,uuencoded. 8 compressed postscript figures available at ftp://asta.pa.uky.edu/shlosman/lett100/, mget *.eps.Z To appear in ApJ. LetterKeywords
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