5.1.5. Dynamics of Bars.
The Importance of Rotation Versus Random Motions: Comparison
with N-Body Models
In this section I examine the radial variation in NGC 936 and in
the n-body models of the ratio V /
of rotation velocity to
velocity dispersion. As discussed in
section 4.2.6, V /
measures the
relative dynamical importance of ordered and random motions.
In the following discussion all radii are scaled to a common dimensionless system by dividing them by the corotation radius rcor. This is a natural length scale because theoretical arguments suggest that bars end at or just inside corotation (e.g., Contopoulos 1979, 1980; Sellwood 1980, 1981). Values of rcor are given in MS and in HZ. For NGC 936 I assume that rcor = rB = 51" along the major axis. The probable sense of any error in this assumption is that rcor may be larger than the adopted value.
Figure 45 shows the radial dependence of V /
in NGC 936 and in the
models. Since kinematic data for the projected MS model are given for
only two orientations, I use these in the left-hand panel for a
comparison with the HZ model. In both cases the bar is edge-on, and the
"spectrograph slit" is in the equatorial plane. V /
is slightly larger
when the bar is seen end-on than when it is viewed broadside. However,
the two models behave very similarly from the center to-a radius
r / rcor ~ 0.7. Here the difference in initial
velocity dispersions may begin to have a significant effect
(Zang 1981).
To investigate the
importance of projection, the left panel also shows unprojected but
azimuthally averaged V /
values for the
equatorial plane of the HZ
model. These are very well approximated by the average of the curves
for the bar seen broadside and end-on. Projection effects on V /
are not large.
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Figure 45. The local ratio of velocity to
velocity dispersion for
n-body bar models and for NGC 936. All quantities except the crosses
refer to projected configurations. Radii r are normalized to the
corotation radius rcor. The viewing geometry is given
in the notation of
Hohl and Zang (1979):
|
In the right-hand panel of Figure 45, the
inclination of the HZ
model is approximately equal to that of the galaxy. Rotation is
considerably reduced at i = 45° or 49°. The dispersion
is changed less,
because the model bar is as thick as it is wide. Two sets of points
are shown in the figure, corresponding to measurements of NGC 936 made
along the major axis and bar. When the slit is placed along the
kinematic major axis of the model, the values of V /
obtained are
insensitive to the orientation of the bar (upper set of points). Those NGC
936 measurements which refer to the bar (0.2
r /
rcor
1)
are consistent
with the points for the HZ model. (At smaller radii the points
for NGC 936 show a peak in V /
which refers to the
rapidly-rotating
bulge.) If the slit is placed along the bar rather than the major
axis, the velocities decrease by a factor of ~ 2, while
changes
little. Again the behavior of the model is similar to that of the
galaxy, although NGC 936 appears to be slightly hotter than the model.
This difference is decreased if the real corotation radius is larger
than the assumed value.
There are two possible problems with the above discussion. First,
the model bar is probably less flattened than the real one. When the
model is seen at i = 45°, V /
is therefore smaller than
it should be because of the large axial velocity dispersion. Therefore,
Figure 45
slightly underestimates the amount that the galaxy is hotter than the
model. The second potential problem is the behavior of the Fourier
velocity program when presented with spectra of a mixture of populations
with different dispersions
(section 4.2.1;
Fig. 32). Given the rather
isotropic velocity dispersions illustrated in
Figure 41, this is not a
major worry. However, the effect should be kept in mind as we make
increasingly detailed comparisons of models and observations.