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The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Asymmetry in Gas Kinematics and its links to Stellar Mass and Star Formation

Authors :
Bloom, J. V.
Fogarty, L. M. R.
Croom, S. M.
Schaefer, A.
Bryant, J. J.
Cortese, L.
Richards, S.
Bland-Hawthorn, J.
Ho, I-T.
Scott, N.
Goldstein, G.
Medling, A.
Brough, S.
Sweet, S. M.
Cecil, G.
Lopez-Sanchez, A.
Glazebrook, K.
Parker, Q.
Allen, J. T.
Goodwin, M.
Green, A. W.
Konstantopoulos, I. S.
Lawrence, J. S.
Lorente, N.
Owers, M. S.
Sharp, R.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We study the properties of kinematically disturbed galaxies in the SAMI Galaxy Survey using a quantitative criterion, based on kinemetry (Krajnovic et al.). The approach, similar to the application of kinemetry by Shapiro et al. uses ionised gas kinematics, probed by H{\alpha} emission. By this method 23+/-7% of our 360-galaxy sub-sample of the SAMI Galaxy Survey are kinematically asymmetric. Visual classifications agree with our kinemetric results for 90% of asymmetric and 95% of normal galaxies. We find stellar mass and kinematic asymmetry are inversely correlated and that kinematic asymmetry is both more frequent and stronger in low-mass galaxies. This builds on previous studies that found high fractions of kinematic asymmetry in low mass galaxies using a variety of different methods. Concentration of star forma- tion and kinematic disturbance are found to be correlated, confirming results found in previous work. This effect is stronger for high mass galaxies (log(M*) > 10) and indicates that kinematic disturbance is linked to centrally concentrated star formation. Comparison of the inner (within 0.5Re) and outer H{\alpha} equivalent widths of asymmetric and normal galaxies shows a small but significant increase in inner equivalent width for asymmetric galaxies.<br />Comment: 29 pages, 21 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1610.02773
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw2605