The inside-out formation of nuclear discs and the absence of old central spheroids in barred galaxies of the TIMER survey
Adrian Bittner, Patricia S\'anchez-Bl\'azquez, Dimitri A. Gadotti,, Justus Neumann, Francesca Fragkoudi, Paula Coelho, Adriana de, Lorenzo-C\'aceres, Jes\'us Falc\'on-Barroso, Taehyun Kim, Ryan Leaman,, Ignacio Mart\'in-Navarro, Jairo M\'endez-Abreu, Isabel P\'erez, Miguel

TL;DR
This study uses MUSE observations to analyze the formation and evolution of nuclear discs and rings in barred galaxies, revealing that nuclear rings are the outer parts of nuclear discs and that these structures form through bar-driven secular processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed stellar population analysis linking nuclear rings and discs, supporting a continuous formation scenario driven by bar evolution.
Findings
Nuclear discs are younger and more metal-rich than their surroundings.
Nuclear rings are the outer edge of nuclear discs, sharing similar properties.
No evidence found for large dispersion-dominated components in galaxy centers.
Abstract
The centres of disc galaxies host a variety of structures built via both internal and external processes. In this study, we constrain the formation and evolution of these central structures, in particular nuclear rings and nuclear discs, by deriving maps of mean stellar ages, metallicities and [/Fe] abundances. We use observations obtained with the MUSE integral-field spectrograph for the TIMER sample of 21 massive barred galaxies. Our results indicate that nuclear discs and nuclear rings are part of the same physical component, with nuclear rings constituting the outer edge of nuclear discs. All nuclear discs in the sample are clearly distinguished based on their stellar population properties. As expected in the picture of bar-driven secular evolution, nuclear discs are younger, more metal-rich, and show lower [/Fe] enhancements, as compared to their immediate…
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