Photometric decomposition of edge-on galaxies indicates that projection effects cause a substantially higher fraction of Type II disk breaks than reported in previous work.
Origin of Radially Increasing Stellar Scaleheight in a Galactic Disk
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abstract
For the past twenty years, it has been accepted that the vertical scaleheight of the stellar disk in spiral galaxies is constant with radius. However, there is no clear physical explanation for this in the literature. Here we calculate the vertical stellar scaleheight for a self-gravitating stellar disk including the additional gravitational force of the HI and H_2 gas and the dark matter halo. We apply our model to two edge-on galaxies, NGC 891 and NGC 4565, and find that the resulting scaleheight shows a linear increase of nearly a factor of two within the optical disk for both these galaxies. Interestingly, we show that the observed data when looked at closely, do not imply a constant scaleheight but actually support this moderate flaring in scaleheight.
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astro-ph.GA 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Projection-Enhanced Disk Breaks: Evidence from Deep Photometric Decomposition
Photometric decomposition of edge-on galaxies indicates that projection effects cause a substantially higher fraction of Type II disk breaks than reported in previous work.