UGC 4599: A Photometric Study of the Nearest Hoag-Type Ring Galaxy
Ido Finkelman, Noah Brosch

TL;DR
This study analyzes UGC 4599, a galaxy resembling Hoag's Object, revealing its elliptical core, spiral ring with star formation, and extensive HI gas, suggesting a history of galaxy interaction rather than secular evolution.
Contribution
It provides a detailed photometric and HI analysis of UGC 4599, proposing a galaxy interaction origin over secular evolution for its Hoag-type structure.
Findings
Central body follows an r^1/4 profile
Ring is a one-and-a-half turn spiral with star formation
Galaxy likely resulted from a major interaction over 5 Gyr ago
Abstract
We present a photometric study of UGC 4599, a low-luminosity galaxy superficially resembling Hoag's Object in that on sky survey images it appears to be a complete ring surrounding a roundish core. The nature of the outer ring of Hoag-type galaxies is still debated and may be related either to slow secular evolution or to environmental processes, such as galaxy-galaxy interactions. we show that in UGC 4599 (a) the nearly round central body follows well an r^1/4 light profile almost all the way to the centre, (b) the isophotes are strongly twisted with a sharp 45 deg transition at a radius of r~6 arcsec, (c) the blue ring seems to have reached near-equilibrium configuration with the central body, (d) the ring is actually composed of a one-and-a-half turn spiral feature, and (e) one side of the spiral shows conspicuous star formation in the form of at least nine HII regions, revealed by…
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