Polar Ring Galaxies and the Tully-Fisher relation: implications for the dark halo shape

  • Arnaboldi M
  • Iodice E
  • Bournaud F
  • et al.
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Abstract

We have investigated the Tully-Fisher relation for Polar Ring Galaxies (PRGs), based on near infrared, optical and H i data available for a sample of these peculiar objects. The total K-band luminosity, which mainly comes from the central host galaxy, and the measured H i linewidth at 20% of the peak line flux density, which traces the potential in the polar plane, place most polar rings of the sample far from the Tully-Fisher relation defined for spiral galaxies, with many PRGs showing larger H i line-widths than expected for the observed K band luminosity. This result is confirmed by a larger sample of objects, based on B-band data. This observational evidence may be related to the dark halo shape and orientation in these systems, which we study by numerical modeling of PRG formation and dynamics: the larger rotation velocities observed in PRGs can be explained by a flattened polar halo, aligned with the polar ring.

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Arnaboldi, M., Iodice, E., Bournaud, F., Combes, F., Sparke, L. S., Van Driel, W., & Capaccioli, M. (2004). Polar Ring Galaxies and the Tully-Fisher relation: implications for the dark halo shape. Symposium - International Astronomical Union, 220, 405–410. https://doi.org/10.1017/s007418090018372x

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