The Stellar and Gas Kinematics of the LITTLE THINGS Dwarf Irregular Galaxy NGC 1569
Megan Johnson, Deidre A. Hunter, Se-Heon Oh, Hong-Xin Zhang, Bruce, Elmegreen, Elias Brinks, Erik Tollerud, and Kimberly Herrmann

TL;DR
This study investigates the three-dimensional structure and kinematics of NGC 1569, revealing a thick stellar disk, gas outflows, and the impact of ext{H}{1} clouds on starburst activity, combining stellar, gas, and mass distribution analyses.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of stellar velocity dispersion and structure in NGC 1569, linking gas dynamics to starburst triggers and mass distribution.
Findings
Stars in NGC 1569 form a thick disk with Vmax/σz ≈ 2.4
Evidence of outflows and expanding shells near starburst regions
Impacting ext{H}{1} clouds likely triggered the recent starburst
Abstract
In order to understand the formation and evolution of dIm galaxies, one needs to understand their three-dimensional structure. We present measurements of the stellar velocity dispersion in NGC 1569, a nearby post-starburst dIm galaxy. The stellar vertical velocity dispersion, , coupled with the maximum rotational velocity derived from \ion{H}{1} observations, , gives a measure of how kinematically hot the galaxy is, and, therefore, indicates its structure. We conclude that the stars in NGC 1569 are in a thick disk with a = 2.4 0.7. In addition to the structure, we analyze the ionized gas kinematics from \ion{O}{3} observations along the morphological major axis. These data show evidence for outflow from the inner starburst region and a potential expanding shell near supermassive star cluster (SSC) A. When compared to the…
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