The molecular polar disc in NGC 2768
Alison F. Crocker, Martin Bureau, Lisa M. Young, Francoise Combes

TL;DR
This study maps the molecular polar disc in NGC 2768 using CO lines, revealing a rotating gas ring with implications for galaxy evolution, despite no clear signs of recent star formation.
Contribution
First detailed CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) maps of the molecular polar disc in NGC 2768, showing its structure and kinematics with implications for galaxy ISM studies.
Findings
Detection of a rotating molecular polar disc or ring.
No evidence of recent star formation in the stellar population.
Observation of millimetre continuum emission in a low-luminosity AGN.
Abstract
We present CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) maps of the molecular polar disc in the elliptical galaxy NGC 2768 obtained at the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer. The maps have a resolution of 2.6" x 2.3" and 1.2" x 1.2" for the CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) lines, respectively. The CO maps complete the unique picture of the interstellar medium (ISM) of NGC 2768; the dust, molecular gas, ionised gas and neutral hydrogen (HI) trace the recent acquisition of cold and cool gas over two orders of magnitude in radii (and much more in density). In agreement with the other ISM components, the CO distribution extends nearly perpendicularly to the photometric major axis of the galaxy. Velocity maps of the CO show a rotating polar disc or ring in the inner kiloparsec. This cool gas could lead to kinematic substructure formation within NGC 2768. However, the stellar velocity field and H-beta absorption linestrength…
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