The flaring HI disk of the nearby spiral galaxy NGC 2683
B. Vollmer, F. Nehlig, R. Ibata (Observatoire astronomique de, Strasbourg, France)

TL;DR
This study presents deep HI observations of NGC 2683, revealing a flaring atomic gas disk with a warp, and suggests external gas accretion as a key driver of turbulence and star formation suppression in the galaxy's outer regions.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed 3D model of NGC 2683's gas disk, including a flaring structure and warp, and investigates the turbulence sources, emphasizing external gas accretion's role.
Findings
The HI disk exhibits a steep, saturated flare.
No extended atomic gas halo is detected.
External gas accretion likely drives turbulence.
Abstract
New deep VLA D array HI observations of the highly inclined nearby spiral galaxy NGC 2683 are presented. Archival C array data were processed and added to the new observations. To investigate the 3D structure of the atomic gas disk, we made different 3D models for which we produced model HI data cubes. The main ingredients of our best-fit model are (i) a thin disk inclined by 80 degrees; (ii) a crude approximation of a spiral and/or bar structure by an elliptical surface density distribution of the gas disk; (iii) a slight warp in inclination; (iv) an exponential flare; and (v) a low surface-density gas ring. The slope of NGC 2683's flare is comparable, but somewhat steeper than those of other spiral galaxies. NGC 2683's maximum height of the flare is also comparable to those of other galaxies. On the other hand, a saturation of the flare is only observed in NGC 2683. Based on the…
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