INVESTIGADORES
CARDACI Monica Viviana
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Kinematics of gas and stars in circumnuclear star-forming regions of early type spirals
Autor/es:
G.F. HÄGELE, A.I. DÍAZ, M.V. CARDACI, E. TERLEVICH AND R. TERLEVICH
Lugar:
Granada, España
Reunión:
Workshop; Young massive star clusters: Initial conditions and environments; 2007
Institución organizadora:
Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía
Resumen:
We present high resolution (R ~20000) spectra in the blue and the far red of cicumnuclear star-forming regions (CNSFRs) in three early type spirals (NGC3351, NGC2903 and NGC3310) which have allowed the study of the kinematics of stars and ionized gas in these structures and, for the first time, the derivation of their dynamical masses for the first two. In some cases these regions, about 100 to 150 pc in size, are seen to be composed of several individual star clusters with sizes between 1.5 and 4.9 pc estimated from Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images. The stellar dispersions have been obtained from the Calcium triplet (CaT) lines at lambdalambda 8494,8542,8662 A, while the gas velocity dispersions have been measured by Gaussian fits to the H and [OIII] lambda 5007 A lines on the high dispersion spectra. Values of the stellar velocity dispersions are between 30 and 68 km/s. We apply the virial theorem to estimate dynamical masses of the clusters, assuming that systems are gravitationally bounded and spherically symmetric, and using previously measured sizes. The measured values of the stellar velocity dispersions yield dynamical masses of the order of 10^7 to 10^8 solar masses for the whole CNSFRs. Stellar and gas velocity dispersions are found to differ by about 20 to 30 km/s with the H emission lines being narrower than both the stellar lines and the [OIII] lambda 5007 A lines. The twice ionized oxygen, on the other hand, shows velocity dispersions comparable to those shown by stars, in some cases, even larger. We have found indications of the presence of two different kinematical components in the ionized gas of the regions. We have mapped the velocity field in the central kiloparsec of the spiral galaxies NGC3351 and NGC2903. For the first object the radial velocity curve shows deviations from circular motions for the ionized hydrogen consistent with its infall towards the central regions of the galaxy at a velocity of about 25 km/s. For NGC3310 we present preliminary results of the velocity dispersions for one of the two observed slit position angles, two CNSFRs and the nucleus.