The intrinsic shape of bulges
J. Mendez-Abreu (1,2), E. Simonneau (3), J. A. L. Aguerri (1,2), E. M., Corsini (4) ((1) Instituto Astrofisico de Canarias, (2) Departamento de, Astrofisica, Universidad La Laguna, (3) Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris,, C.N.R.S.-U.P.M.C., (4) Dipartimento di Astronomia

TL;DR
This study introduces a new photometric method to determine the intrinsic three-dimensional shapes of galaxy bulges, revealing their triaxiality and linking their shapes to formation processes like mergers.
Contribution
A novel, geometry-based technique for deriving bulge shapes from photometric data, applicable across different galaxy types and independent of specific galaxy classifications.
Findings
Many bulges are elliptical and flattened along their axes.
Bulge shapes are bimodal in triaxiality, linked to Sersic index and bulge-to-total ratio.
Different formation scenarios are suggested for bulges based on their shape and structural parameters.
Abstract
The structural parameters of a magnitude-limited sample of 148 unbarred S0-Sb galaxies were derived using the GASP2D algorithm and then analyzed to derive the intrinsic shape of their bulges. We developed a new method to derive the intrinsic shape of bulges based on photometric data and on the geometrical relationships between the apparent and intrinsic shapes of bulges and disks. The method is conceived as completely independent of the studied class of objects, and it can be applied whenever a triaxial ellipsoid embedded in an axisymmetric component is considered. We found that the intrinsic shape is well constrained for a subsample of 115 bulges with favorable viewing angles. A large fraction of them is characterized by an elliptical section (B/A<0.9). This fraction is 33%, 55%, and 43% if using their maximum, mean, or median equatorial ellipticity, respectively. Most of them are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
