Science-advisor
REGISTER info/FAQ
Login
username
password
     
forgot password?
register here
 
Research articles
  search articles
  reviews guidelines
  reviews
  articles index
My Pages
my alerts
  my messages
  my reviews
  my favorites
 
 
Stat
Members: 3645
Articles: 2'504'928
Articles rated: 2609

25 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/9610264

 Article overview



Modeling the Mass Distribution in Spiral Galaxies
Adrick H. Broeils ; Stephane Courteau ;
Date 31 Oct 1996
Subject astro-ph
AffiliationStockholm Observatory) and Stephane Courteau (NOAO/KPNO
AbstractWe use deep r-band photometry and Halpha rotation curves for a sample of 290 late-type spirals to model their mass distribution within the optical radius. We examine luminosity profile decompositions into bulge and disk carefully and confirm that bulge light is best modeled by a seeing-convolved exponential profile. The optical rotation curves are well-reproduced with a combination of bulge and "maximum" disk components only. No dark halo is needed. The disk mass-to-light ratios (M/L’s) correlate with the "size" of galaxies, as measured by mass, luminosity, or disk scale length. Correcting for this scale effect yields a narrow distribution of intrinsic M/L’s for this galaxy population. By combining these models with HI data for other samples, we confirm that the luminous mass fraction increases with galaxy "size".
Source arXiv, astro-ph/9610264
Services Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites   
 
Visitor rating: did you like this article? no 1   2   3   4   5   yes

No review found.
 Did you like this article?

This article or document is ...
important:
of broad interest:
readable:
new:
correct:
Global appreciation:

  Note: answers to reviews or questions about the article must be posted in the forum section.
Authors are not allowed to review their own article. They can use the forum section.

browser Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)






ScienXe.org
» my Online CV
» Free


News, job offers and information for researchers and scientists:
home  |  contact  |  terms of use  |  sitemap
Copyright © 2005-2024 - Scimetrica