The stellar kinematics and populations of boxy bulges: cylindrical rotation and vertical gradients
Michael J. Williams (1,2), Michel Zamojski (3), Martin Bureau (1),, Harald Kuntschner (2), Michael R. Merrifield (4), P. Tim de Zeeuw (2,5),, Konrad Kuijken (5) ((1) Oxford, (2) ESO, (3) Spitzer Science Center (4), Nottingham (5) Sterrewacht Leiden)

TL;DR
This study investigates the stellar kinematics and populations of boxy bulges in edge-on galaxies, finding that some rotate cylindrically and are consistent with pure disc origins, while others show more complex structures.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed stellar population and kinematic analysis of multiple boxy bulges, demonstrating their diverse properties and implications for galaxy formation models.
Findings
NGC3390's bulge rotates cylindrically and has disk-like metallicity.
ESO311-G012's bulge also exhibits near-cylindrical rotation.
NGC1381's bulge shows mixed properties, suggesting a composite origin.
Abstract
Boxy and peanut-shaped bulges are seen in about half of edge-on disc galaxies. Comparisons of the photometry and major-axis gas and stellar kinematics of these bulges to simulations of bar formation and evolution indicate that they are bars viewed in projection. If the properties of boxy bulges can be entirely explained by assuming they are bars, then this may imply that their hosts are pure disc galaxies with no classical bulge. A handful of these bulges, including that of the Milky Way, have been observed to rotate cylindrically, i.e. with a mean stellar velocity independent of height above the disc. In order to assess whether such behaviour is ubiquitous in boxy bulges, and whether a pure disc interpretation is consistent with their stellar populations, we have analysed the stellar kinematics and populations of the boxy or peanut-shaped bulges in a sample of five edge-on galaxies. We…
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