by Ann » Wed Apr 23, 2014 10:56 pm
NGC 3314 wrote:
An interesting feature of this pair is the corkscrew shape of the dust lane passing in front of NGC 6622 - this and a couple of other examples (like NGC 1409/1410) suggest that this marks such a strong gravitational influence for the companion that gas may be transferred into the smaller galaxy and stay.
So which of these galaxies is the "main one" and which one is the companion?
NGC 6622 on the left looks smaller, but it has a large yellow bar. I wouldn't expect a "small" galaxy to have a large and bright yellow bar. Interestingly, too, NGC 6622 appears to lack star formation, since (almost) all the "blue clumps" here seem to be associated with NGC 6621, or with the "point of contact" between these two galaxies. If gas is being transferred from NGC 6621 into NGC 6622, doesn't that suggest that NGC 6622 is the more massive galaxy?
Also, there is an enormous blue clump of star-forming regions right in between, just about where the combined gravity of the galaxies reduces the gradient in velocity so that really massive gas clouds could collect.
Indeed, very fascinating. There is a smaller but also obvious blue clump seen in a dusty arm passing in front of the bulge of NGC 6621. The arms of NGC 6621 are generally rather blue, in stark contrast to the "arm" of NGC 6622. Or maybe that isn't an arm, but perhaps a central dust lane? Is it possible that NGC 6622 used to be an S0 galaxy with a dust lane,
slightly like NGC 7814, before it got strongly disturbed by its interaction with NGC 6621? Perhaps, as is the case of
the Antennae galaxies, this is a collision between one gas-rich and one gas-poor galaxy? There appears to be considerably less overall star formation in Arp 81 than in the Antennae galaxies, however.
Ann
[quote]NGC 3314 wrote:
An interesting feature of this pair is the corkscrew shape of the dust lane passing in front of NGC 6622 - this and a couple of other examples (like NGC 1409/1410) suggest that this marks such a strong gravitational influence for the companion that gas may be transferred into the smaller galaxy and stay.[/quote]
So which of these galaxies is the "main one" and which one is the companion?
NGC 6622 on the left looks smaller, but it has a large yellow bar. I wouldn't expect a "small" galaxy to have a large and bright yellow bar. Interestingly, too, NGC 6622 appears to lack star formation, since (almost) all the "blue clumps" here seem to be associated with NGC 6621, or with the "point of contact" between these two galaxies. If gas is being transferred from NGC 6621 into NGC 6622, doesn't that suggest that NGC 6622 is the more massive galaxy?
[quote]Also, there is an enormous blue clump of star-forming regions right in between, just about where the combined gravity of the galaxies reduces the gradient in velocity so that really massive gas clouds could collect.[/quote]
Indeed, very fascinating. There is a smaller but also obvious blue clump seen in a dusty arm passing in front of the bulge of NGC 6621. The arms of NGC 6621 are generally rather blue, in stark contrast to the "arm" of NGC 6622. Or maybe that isn't an arm, but perhaps a central dust lane? Is it possible that NGC 6622 used to be an S0 galaxy with a dust lane, [url=http://www.astropizza.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/ngc7814_100903.jpg]slightly like NGC 7814[/url], before it got strongly disturbed by its interaction with NGC 6621? Perhaps, as is the case of [url=http://lcogt.net/files/egomez/ngc4038.jpg]the Antennae galaxies[/url], this is a collision between one gas-rich and one gas-poor galaxy? There appears to be considerably less overall star formation in Arp 81 than in the Antennae galaxies, however.
Ann