Quadruple-peaked spectral line profiles as a tool to constrain gravitational potential of shell galaxies
Ivana Ebrova, Lucie Jilkova, Bruno Jungwiert, Miroslav Krizek, Michal, Bilek, Katerina Bartoskova, Tereza Skalicka, Ivana Stoklasova

TL;DR
This paper extends the analysis of spectral line profiles in shell galaxies to include expanding shells, revealing quadruple-peaked profiles that can more accurately constrain the galaxy's gravitational potential and dark matter distribution.
Contribution
It introduces analytical expressions linking quadruple peaks in spectral lines to galaxy mass distribution, improving potential estimation in shell galaxies.
Findings
Quadruple-peaked line profiles are predicted for expanding shells.
Analytical formulas connect spectral peaks to galaxy mass and shell velocity.
Potential of simulated galaxy was successfully recovered using these methods.
Abstract
Stellar shells observed in many giant elliptical and lenticular as well as a few spiral and dwarf galaxies, presumably result from galaxy mergers. Line-of-sight velocity distributions of the shells could, in principle, if measured with a sufficiently high S/N, constitute one of methods to constrain the gravitational potential of the host galaxy. Merrifield & Kuijken (1998) predicted a double-peaked line profile for stationary shells resulting from a nearly radial minor merger. In this paper, we aim at extending their analysis to a more realistic case of expanding shells, inherent to the merging process, whereas we assume the same type of merger and the same orbital geometry. We use analytical approach as well as test particle simulations to predict the line-of-sight velocity profile across the shell structure. Simulated line profiles are convolved with spectral PSFs to estimate the peak…
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