Integral-Field Stellar and Ionized Gas Kinematics of Peculiar Virgo Cluster Spiral Galaxies
J. R. Cort\'es, J. D. P. Kenney, E. Hardy

TL;DR
This study uses integral field spectroscopy to analyze the stellar and gas kinematics of 13 peculiar Virgo cluster galaxies, revealing evidence of gravitational interactions and gas stripping affecting their evolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed 2D kinematic maps and analysis of 13 galaxies, highlighting the roles of gravitational encounters and ram pressure stripping in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Many galaxies show kinematic misalignments and non-circular motions.
Most galaxies have significant random stellar motion support, indicating past interactions.
Evidence suggests combined effects of ICM-ISM stripping and gravitational interactions.
Abstract
We present the stellar and ionized gas kinematics of 13 bright peculiar Virgo cluster galaxies observed with the DensePak Integral Field Unit at the WIYN 3.5-meter telescope, to seek kinematic evidence that these galaxies have experienced gravitational interactions or gas stripping. 2-Dimensional maps of the stellar velocity , and stellar velocity dispersion and the ionized gas velocity (H and/or [\ion{O}{3}]) are presented for galaxies in the sample. The stellar rotation curves and velocity dispersion profiles are determined for 13 galaxies, and the ionized gas rotation curves are determined for 6 galaxies. Misalignments between the optical and kinematical major axis are found in several galaxies. While in some cases this is due to a bar, in other cases it seems associated with a gravitational interaction or ongoing ram pressure stripping. Non-circular gas motions…
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