Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-4hhp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-11T01:03:08.001Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Ringed X-Galaxy NGC 7020

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

Ronald Buta*
Affiliation:
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Alabama, U.S.A.

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The southern S0+ galaxy NGC 7020 presents an unusual morphology: it includes a very regular outer ring which is completely detached and which envelops an inner ring/lens zone with a hexagon surrounding an X shape (Figures 1a and 1b). The outer ring has a high contrast compared to those usually observed in barred galaxies, yet NGC 7020 is not obviously barred. The morphology of this galaxy poses an interesting puzzle in that the hexagonal/X zone is not a typical type of feature to find in the interior of such a regular ring. Instead, the zone bears a striking resemblance to the edge-on galaxy IC 4767, recently studied by Whitmore and Bell (1988 = WB88) and dubbed by them as the “X-galaxy” because its inner regions appear to be crossed by two distinct enhancements lined at ±22° with respect to the major axis. The observation of a similar phenomenon in NGC 7020 is interesting because of the suggestion by WB88 that “X” structures could be related to accretion of matter associated with a merger or tidal encounter between an SO and a small satellite galaxy. If this interpretation is correct for NGC 7020, then it has important implications for the nature of the outer ring. An alternative interpretation is that the inner hexagonal/X zone is a region where resonant periodic orbits in a weak bi-symmetric potential perturbation are influencing the morphology more strongly than might be expected. In this paper, I give a brief summary of a more extensive paper (Buta 1990c = B90c) and a few other details concerning this interesting galaxy.

Type
III. Observations of Related Objects
Copyright
Copyright © NASA 1990

References

Athanassoula, E., Bosma, A., Creze, M., and Schwarz, M. P. 1982, Astr. Ap. 107, 101.Google Scholar
Buta, R. 1988, Ap. J. Suppl. 66, 233.Google Scholar
Athanassoula, E., Bosma, A., Creze, M., and Schwarz, M. P. 1990a, Ap. J. 351, 62.Google Scholar
Athanassoula, E., Bosma, A., Creze, M., and Schwarz, M. P. 1990b, Ap. J. 354, in press.Google Scholar
Athanassoula, E., Bosma, A., Creze, M., and Schwarz, M. P. 1990c, Ap. J. 356, in press (B90c).Google Scholar
Combes, F. and Sanders, R. H. 1981, Astr. Ap. 96, 164.Google Scholar
Contopoulos, G. 1988 in Integrability in Dynamical Systems, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Vol. 536, eds. Buchler, J. R. Ipser, J. R., and Williams, C. A. (New York: New York Academy of Sciences), p. 1.Google Scholar
de Vaucouleurs, G. 1959, Handbuch der Physik 53, 275.Google Scholar
Kormendy, J. 1979, Ap. J. 227, 714.Google Scholar
Kormendy, J. 1984a, Ap. J. 286, 116.Google Scholar
Kormendy, J. 1984b, Ap. J. 286, 132.Google Scholar
Pfenniger, D. 1984, Astr. Ap. 134, 373.Google Scholar
Pfenniger, D. 1985, Astr. Ap. 150, 112.Google Scholar
Schweizer, F., Ford, W. K., Jedrzejewski, R., and Giovanelli, R. 1987, Ap. J. 320, 454.Google Scholar
Wakamatsu, K. 1990, Ap. J. 348, 448.Google Scholar
Whitmore, B. C. and Bell, M. B. 1988, Ap. J. 324, 741 (WB88).Google Scholar