Spectroscopic decomposition of NGC 3521: unveiling the properties of the bulge and disc
Lodovico Coccato (1), Maximilian H. Fabricius (2, 3), Roberto P., Saglia (2, 3), Ralf Bender (3, 2), Peter Erwin (2), Niv Drory (4), and, Lorenzo Morelli (5) ((1) European Southern Observatory, Garching, Germany,, (2) Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, Garching

TL;DR
This study disentangles the stellar populations and kinematics of NGC 3521's bulge and disc, revealing their distinct properties and formation history through spectroscopic analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a method to separate bulge and disc spectra at each position, providing detailed insights into their individual stellar populations and kinematic differences.
Findings
Bulge rotates slowly with high velocity dispersion.
Disc shows younger stellar populations and negative age gradients.
Both components have negative metallicity gradients.
Abstract
We study the kinematics and the stellar populations of the bulge and disc of the spiral galaxy NGC 3521. At each position in the field of view, we separate the contributions of the bulge and the disc from the total observed spectrum and study their kinematics, age, and metallicities independently. Their properties are clearly distinct: the bulge rotates more slowly, has a higher velocity dispersion, and is less luminous than the disc. We identify three main populations of stars in NGC 3521: old ( Gyr), intermediate ( 3 Gyr), and young (1 Gyr). The mass and light of NGC 3521 are dominated by the intermediate stellar population. The youngest population contributes mostly to the disc component and its contribution increases with radius. We also study the luminosity-weighed properties of the stars in NGC 3521. Along the photometric major axis, we find: i) no age…
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