A Warp in Progress: H I and Radio Continuum Observations of the Spiral NGC 3145
Michele Kaufman, Elias Brinks, Curtis Struck, Bruce G. Elmegreen,, Debra M. Elmegreen

TL;DR
This study uses radio observations to reveal warping motions and tidal features in the spiral galaxy NGC 3145, suggesting recent interaction with its companion NGC 3143 as the cause.
Contribution
It provides new radio continuum and H I observations of NGC 3145 and its companions, identifying warping motions and tidal arms, and proposes an interaction scenario based on simple modeling.
Findings
Warping motions indicate large-scale perturbations.
Identification of out-of-plane tidal arms.
Interaction with NGC 3143 likely caused the observed features.
Abstract
We present VLA H I and 6 cm radio continuum observations of the spiral NGC 3145 and H I observations of its two companions, NGC 3143 and PGC 029578. In optical images NGC 3145 has stellar arms that appear to cross, forming "X"-features. Our radio continuum observations rule out shock fronts at 3 of the 4 "X"-features. In the middle-to-outer disk, the H I line-profiles of NGC 3145 are skewed. Relative to the disk, the gas in the skewed wing of the line-profiles has z-motions away from us on the approaching side of the galaxy and z-motions of about the same magnitude (about 40 km/s) towards us on the receding side. These warping motions imply that there has been a perturbation with a sizeable component perpendicular to the disk over large spatial scales. Two features in NGC 3145 have velocities indicating that they are out-of-plane tidal arms. One is an apparent branch of a main spiral…
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