The intrinsic shape of bulges in the CALIFA survey
L. Costantin, J. M\'endez-Abreu, E. M. Corsini, M. C. Eliche-Moral, T., Tapia, L. Morelli, E. Dalla Bont\`a, and A. Pizzella

TL;DR
This study investigates the three-dimensional shapes of galactic bulges in nearby galaxies using a statistical approach and simulations, revealing their mostly oblate nature and links to galaxy properties and formation processes.
Contribution
Introduces a new method to accurately determine bulge shapes and applies it to CALIFA survey data, providing insights into bulge formation mechanisms.
Findings
66% of bulges are nearly oblate
19% are prolate spheroids
15% are triaxial ellipsoids
Abstract
The intrinsic shape of galactic bulges in nearby galaxies provides crucial information to separate bulge types. We intended to derive accurate constraints to the intrinsic shape of bulges to provide new clues on their formation mechanisms and set new limitations for future simulations. We retrieved the intrinsic shape of a sample of CALIFA bulges using a statistical approach. Taking advantage of GalMer numerical simulations of binary mergers we estimated the reliability of the procedure. Analyzing the -band mock images of resulting lenticular remnants, we studied the intrinsic shape of their bulges at different galaxy inclinations. Finally, we introduced a new (, ) diagram to analyze possible correlations between the intrinsic shape and the properties of bulges. We tested the method on simulated lenticular remnants, finding that for galaxies with inclinations $25^{\circ} <…
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