Self-consistent bulge/disk/halo galaxy dynamical modeling using integral field kinematics
D. S. Taranu, D. Obreschkow, J. J. Dubinski, L. M. R. Fogarty, J. van, de Sande, B. Catinella, L. Cortese, A. Moffett, A. S. G. Robotham, J. T., Allen, J. Bland-Hawthorn, J. J. Bryant, M. Colless, S. M. Croom, F., D'Eugenio, R. L. Davies, M. J. Drinkwater, S. P. Driver

TL;DR
This paper presents a new self-consistent modeling method for disk galaxies that combines photometric and integral field spectroscopic data to accurately constrain galaxy mass components and kinematics.
Contribution
The authors develop a comprehensive modeling approach using equilibrium distribution functions and Bayesian techniques, improving parameter constraints over traditional methods.
Findings
Successfully applied to a GAMA spiral galaxy with consistent parameter estimates.
Constrained stellar mass-to-light ratios and matched HI-inferred circular velocities.
Achieved rapid model generation within a minute on modern processors.
Abstract
We introduce a method for modeling disk galaxies designed to take full advantage of data from integral field spectroscopy (IFS). The method fits equilibrium models to simultaneously reproduce the surface brightness, rotation and velocity dispersion profiles of a galaxy. The models are fully self-consistent 6D distribution functions for a galaxy with a Sersic-profile stellar bulge, exponential disk and parametric dark matter halo, generated by an updated version of GalactICS. By creating realistic flux-weighted maps of the kinematic moments (flux, mean velocity and dispersion), we simultaneously fit photometric and spectroscopic data using both maximum-likelihood and Bayesian (MCMC) techniques. We apply the method to a GAMA spiral galaxy (G79635) with kinematics from the SAMI Galaxy Survey and deep - and -band photometry from the VST-KiDS survey, comparing parameter constraints…
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