Surprises in Image Decomposition of Edge-on Galaxies: does Sombrero have a (classical) bulge?
Dimitri A. Gadotti (1), Rub\'en S\'anchez-Janssen (1) ((1) ESO)

TL;DR
This study re-evaluates the structural components of the Sombrero galaxy, revealing that its bulge may be disc-like and challenging traditional classifications, with implications for black hole mass estimates and galaxy formation theories.
Contribution
It provides a detailed structural analysis showing the potential pseudo-bulge nature of Sombrero's bulge and discusses its formation history and deviations from typical scaling relations.
Findings
Bulge Sersic index drops when outer spheroid added
Black hole mass estimates increase with revised bulge mass
Sombrero is an outlier in galaxy scaling relations
Abstract
The spheroid of the Sombrero galaxy, NGC 4594, is considered a prototype of classical, merger-built bulges. We use a Spitzer, IRAC 3.6 micron image to perform a detailed structural analysis of this galaxy. If one fits to this image only bulge and disc components, the bulge occupies a locus in the mass-size relation close to that of elliptical galaxies. When an outer stellar spheroid is added to improve the fit, the bulge Sersic index drops by a factor of ~ 2, and, if taken at face value, could mean that this bulge is actually a disc-like, pseudo-bulge, or a bar viewed end-on. The bulge effective radius and the bulge-to-total ratio also drop dramatically, putting the bulge in a position closer to that of bulges in the mass-size relation. We discuss implications from these findings, including the locus of the Sombrero bulge in the black hole mass vs. bulge mass relation. With this new…
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