Testing the nature of S0 galaxies using planetary nebula kinematics in NGC 1023
E.Noordermeer, M.R.Merrifield, L.Coccato, M.Arnaboldi, M.Capaccioli,, N.G.Douglas, K.C.Freeman, O.Gerhard, K.Kuijken, F.De Lorenzi, N.R.Napolitano, and A.J. Romanowsky

TL;DR
This study uses planetary nebula kinematics in NGC 1023 to explore whether S0 galaxies form from fading spirals or minor mergers, revealing complex kinematic transitions that suggest diverse evolutionary paths.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed planetary nebula kinematic analysis of NGC 1023, offering new insights into S0 galaxy formation mechanisms and their complex evolutionary histories.
Findings
Inner regions show rotationally-supported disc kinematics.
Outer regions transition to random motion with little rotation.
Kinematic properties suggest a complex formation history.
Abstract
We investigate the manner in which lenticular galaxies are formed by studying their stellar kinematics: an S0 formed from a fading spiral galaxy should display similar cold outer disc kinematics to its progenitor, while an S0 formed in a minor merger should be more dominated by random motions. In a pilot study to attempt to distinguish between these scenarios, we have measured the planetary nebula (PN) kinematics of the nearby S0 system NGC 1023. Using the Planetary Nebula Spectrograph, we have detected and measured the line-of-sight velocities of 204 candidate PNe in the field of this galaxy. Out to intermediate radii, the system displays the kinematics of a normal rotationally-supported disc system. After correction of its rotational velocities for asymmetric drift, the galaxy lies just below the spiral galaxy Tully-Fisher relation, as one would expect for a fading system. However, at…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
