Is NGC 3108 transforming itself from an early to late type galaxy -- an astronomical hermaphrodite?
George Hau, Richard Bower, Virginia Kilborn, Duncan Forbes, Michael, Balogh, Tom Oosterloo

TL;DR
NGC 3108 exhibits signs of forming a stellar disk from HI gas, indicating a possible early-to-late type galaxy transformation, but current star formation rates are insufficient for significant morphological change.
Contribution
This study provides detailed imaging and analysis of NGC 3108's gas and star formation, highlighting its potential as a transitional galaxy undergoing disk formation.
Findings
Extended H_alpha and HI distributions suggest ongoing disk formation.
Current SFR is too low to significantly alter the galaxy's morphology.
The future disk mass will remain small compared to the bulge, limiting transformation.
Abstract
A common feature of hierarchical galaxy formation models is the process of "inverse" morphological transformation: a bulge dominated galaxy accretes a gas disk, dramatically reducing the system's bulge-to-disk mass ratio. During their formation, present day galaxies may execute many such cycles across the Hubble diagram. A good candidate for such a "hermaphrodite" galaxy is NGC 3108: a dust-lane early-type galaxy which has a large amount of HI gas distributed in a large scale disk. We present narrow band H_alpha and R-band imaging, and compare the results with the HI distribution. The emission is in two components: a nuclear bar and an extended disk component which coincides with the HI distribution. This suggests that a stellar disk is currently being formed out of the HI gas. The spatial distributions of the H_alpha and HI emission and the HII regions are consistent with a barred…
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