Polar-ring galaxies: The SDSS view on the symbiotic galaxies

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Abstract

Polar-ring galaxies (PRGs) are multispin systems, showing star formation in a blue latetype component, perpendicular to a red early-type one, revealing how galaxy formation can sometimes occur in successive steps. We perform two-dimensional decomposition in the g, r, i bandpasses of 50 PRGs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Each object was fit with a Sérsic host galaxy and a Sérsic ring. Our general results are: (i) the central (host) galaxies of the PRGs are non-dwarf sub-L* galaxies with colours typical for early-type galaxies. (ii) Polar structures in our sample are, on average, fainter and bluer than their host galaxies. (iii) In most galaxies, the stellarmassM* of the polar component is not negligible in comparison with that of the host. (iv) The distributions of the host galaxies on the size - luminosity and Kormendy diagrams are shifted by ~1 mag to fainter magnitudes in comparison with E/S0 galaxies. It means that the PRGs hosts are more similar to quenched discs than to ordinary early-type galaxies. (v) All the PRGs in our sample are detected in mid-infrared by WISE, and we derive from the 22 μm luminosity their star formation rate (SFR). Their SFR/M* ratio is larger than for the early-type galaxy sample of Atlas3D, showing that the star-forming disc brings a significant contribution to the new stars. Globally, PRGs appear frequently on the green valley in the mass-colour diagram, revealing the symbiotic character between a red-sequence host and a blue cloud ring.

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Reshetnikov, V., & Combes, F. (2015). Polar-ring galaxies: The SDSS view on the symbiotic galaxies. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 447(3), 2287–2294. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stu2604

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