The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Revisiting Galaxy Classification Through High-Order Stellar Kinematics
Jesse van de Sande, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Lisa M.R. Fogarty, Luca, Cortese, Francesco d'Eugenio, Scott M. Croom, Nicholas Scott, James T. Allen,, Sarah Brough, Julia J. Bryant, Gerald Cecil, Matthew Colless, Warrick J., Couch, Roger Davies, Pascal J. Elahi, Caroline Foster

TL;DR
This study uses high-order stellar kinematic moments from the SAMI Galaxy Survey to classify galaxies, revealing new subclasses and linking kinematic signatures to galaxy formation histories.
Contribution
It introduces a novel classification approach based on h3 versus V/σ signatures, identifying five distinct galaxy classes and their relation to galaxy assembly processes.
Findings
Regular rotators show strong h3-V/σ anti-correlation.
New fast rotator class with weak h3-V/σ anti-correlation identified.
Most fast rotators likely contain stellar disks, indicating gas-rich formation histories.
Abstract
Recent cosmological hydrodynamical simulations suggest that integral field spectroscopy can connect the high-order stellar kinematic moments h3 (~skewness) and h4 (~kurtosis) in galaxies to their cosmological assembly history. Here, we assess these results by measuring the stellar kinematics on a sample of 315 galaxies, without a morphological selection, using 2D integral field data from the SAMI Galaxy Survey. A proxy for the spin parameter () and ellipticity () are used to separate fast and slow rotators; there exists a good correspondence to regular and non-regular rotators, respectively, as also seen in earlier studies. We confirm that regular rotators show a strong h3 versus anti-correlation, whereas quasi-regular and non-regular rotators show a more vertical relation in h3 and . Motivated by recent cosmological simulations, we…
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