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The young nuclear stellar disc in the SB0 galaxy NGC 1023

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posted on 2016-04-01, 00:00 authored by E M Corsini, L Morelli, Nicola PastorelloNicola Pastorello, E Dalla Bontá, A Pizzella, E Portaluri
Small kinematically decoupled stellar discs with scalelengths of a few tens of parsec are known to reside in the centre of galaxies. Different mechanisms have been proposed to explain how they form, including gas dissipation and merging of globular clusters. Using archival Hubble
Space Telescope imaging and ground-based integral-field spectroscopy, we investigated the structure and stellar populations of the nuclear stellar disc hosted in the interacting SB0 galaxy NGC 1023. The stars of the nuclear disc are remarkably younger and more metal rich with
respect to the host bulge. These findings support a scenario in which the nuclear disc is the end result of star formation in metal enriched gas piled up in the galaxy centre. The gas can be of either internal or external origin, i.e. from either the main disc of NGC 1023 or the nearby satellite galaxy NGC 1023A. The dissipationless formation of the nuclear disc from already formed stars, through the migration and accretion of star clusters into the galactic centre, is rejected.

History

Journal

Monthly notices of the royal astronomical society

Volume

457

Issue

2

Pagination

1198 - 1207

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Location

Oxford, Eng.

ISSN

0035-8711

eISSN

1365-2966

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, The Authors

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