Azimuthal Variations of Stellar Populations in Barred Galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society(2024)

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摘要
Bars are expected to impact the distribution of stellar populations both during bar formation, as they rearrange stars into new orbits, and afterwards, due to the redistribution of star-formation-fuelling gas and transfer of angular momentum. We study the impact of stellar bars on the azimuthal variation of stellar population age, metallicity and mass surface density in ∼1 000 nearby barred galaxies from the SDSS-IV/MaNGA survey. Bars have higher stellar mass density (0.113^+0.065_-0.067 dex) and are more metal-rich (0.028^+0.033_-0.040 dex) than the discs at the same radii. Stellar ages show a variety of bar to inter-bar contrasts with no consistent trend. The difference in metallicity increases with total stellar mass of the galaxy and distance below the star-forming main sequence. We discuss a combination of potentially responsible processes including kinematic separation, more extended star formation histories and more efficient recycling in bars and at bar-spiral arm connections. Additionally, we observe an offset (10-40) of the peak metallicity to the bar major axis in star-forming bars in low-mass galaxies, and more metal-rich regions outside the ends of the bar in long bars and quenched galaxies. Furthermore, there is a subtle trend of lower metallicities on the leading side of spiral arms compared to the trailing side. Finally, we report a spiral arm surface density feature, which could point towards a dominant bar-spiral connection and pitch angle of α∼ 25. We interpret these features in the context of bar formation and the impact of large-scale gas flows associated with their presence.
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