SDSS-IV MaNGA: Stellar angular momentum of about 2300 galaxies: unveiling the bimodality of massive galaxy properties
Mark T. Graham, Michele Cappellari, Hongyu Li, Shude Mao, Matthew, Bershady, Dmitry Bizyaev, Jonathan Brinkmann, Joel R. Brownstein, Kevin, Bundy, Niv Drory, David R. Law, Kaike Pan, Daniel Thomas, David A. Wake,, Anne-Marie Weijmans, Kyle B. Westfall, Renbin Yan

TL;DR
This study analyzes the stellar angular momentum of about 2300 galaxies using MaNGA survey data, revealing a clear bimodality in galaxy properties related to their assembly history and kinematic classification.
Contribution
It provides the first clear detection of bimodality in the angular momentum distribution of galaxies and links it to galaxy assembly and morphology.
Findings
Bimodality in the (lambda_{Re}, epsilon) diagram.
Identification of a secondary peak of slow rotators at high mass.
Correlation between galaxy morphology, angular momentum, and velocity dispersion.
Abstract
We measure , a proxy for galaxy specific stellar angular momentum within one effective radius, and the ellipticity, , for about 2300 galaxies of all morphological types observed with integral field spectroscopy as part of the MaNGA survey, the largest such sample to date. We use the diagram to separate early-type galaxies into fast and slow rotators. We also visually classify each galaxy according to its optical morphology and two-dimensional stellar velocity field. Comparing these classifications to quantitative measurements reveals tight relationships between angular momentum and galaxy structure. In order to account for atmospheric seeing, we use realistic models of galaxy kinematics to derive a general approximate analytic correction for . Thanks to the size of the sample and the large number of…
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