Peanuts at an Angle: Detecting and Measuring the Three-Dimensional Structure of Bars in Moderately Inclined Galaxies
Peter Erwin, Victor P. Debattista

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that boxy or peanut-shaped bulges in barred galaxies can be detected and measured at moderate inclinations, providing insights into their 3D structure and prevalence beyond edge-on views.
Contribution
It introduces a method to detect and analyze box/peanut structures in moderately inclined galaxies, expanding observational capabilities beyond edge-on orientations.
Findings
Detection of box/peanut signatures in galaxies with inclinations as low as 40 degrees.
Box/peanut structures are most visible when the bar's angle is within 50 degrees of the galaxy's major axis.
Approximately two-thirds of suitable galaxies show evidence of box/peanut structures.
Abstract
We show that direct detection and measurement of the vertically thickened parts of bars (so-called "boxy" or "peanut-shaped" bulges) is possible not only for edge-on galaxies but also for galaxies with moderate inclinations (i < 70 deg), and that examples are relatively common in the nearby universe. Analysis of a sample of 78 nearby, moderately inclined (i < 65 deg) early-type (S0--Sb) barred galaxies shows that the isophotal signature of the box/peanut can usually be detected for inclinations as low as i ~ 40 deg -- and in exceptional cases down to i ~ 30 deg. In agreement with the predictions from N-body simulations, the signature is most easily detectable when the bar's position angle is within ~ 50 deg of the galaxy major axis; in particular, galaxies where the bar lies very close to the minor axis do not show the signature clearly or at all. For galaxies with i = 40--65 deg and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
