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25 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0404235

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The Kinematics of Morphologically Selected z~2 Galaxies in the GOODS-N Field
Dawn K. Erb ; Charles C. Steidel ; Alice E. Shapley ; Max Pettini ; Kurt L. Adelberger ;
Date 12 Apr 2004
Journal Astrophys.J. 612 (2004) 122-130
Subject astro-ph
AffiliationCaltech), Charles C. Steidel (Caltech), Alice E. Shapley (UC Berkeley), Max Pettini (IoA), Kurt L. Adelberger (OCIW
AbstractWe present near-IR spectra of H-alpha emission from 13 galaxies at z~2 in the GOODS-N field. The galaxies were selected primarily because they appear to have elongated morphologies, and slits were aligned with the major axes (as determined from the rest-frame UV emission) of 11 of the 13. If the galaxies are elongated because they are highly inclined, alignment of the slit and major axis should maximize the observed velocity and reveal velocity shear, if present. In spite of this alignment, we see spatially resolved velocity shear in only two galaxies. We show that the seeing makes a large difference in the observed velocity spread of a tilted emission line, and use this information to place limits on the velocity spread of the ionized gas of the galaxies in the sample: we find that all 13 have v_{0.5} < 110 km/s, where v_{0.5} is the velocity shear (half of the velocity range of a tilted emission line) that would be observed under our best seeing conditions of ~0.5". When combined with previous work, our data also indicate that aligning the slit along the major axis does not increase the probability of observing a tilted emission line. We then focus on the one-dimensional velocity dispersion sigma, which is much less affected by the seeing, and see that the elongated subsample exhibits a significantly lower velocity dispersion than galaxies selected at random from our total H-alpha sample, not higher as one might have expected. We also see some evidence that the elongated galaxies are less reddened than those randomly selected using only UV colors. Both of these results are counter to what would be expected if the elongated galaxies were highly inclined disks. It is at least as likely that the galaxies’ elongated morphologies are due to merging subunits.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0404235
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