Galaxy Zoo: Kinematics of strongly and weakly barred galaxies
Tobias G\'eron, Rebecca J. Smethurst, Chris Lintott, Sandor Kruk,, Karen L. Masters, Brooke Simmons, Kameswara Bharadwaj Mantha, Mike Walmsley,, L. Garma-Oehmichen, Niv Drory, Richard R. Lane

TL;DR
This study analyzes the kinematics of 225 barred galaxies using IFU data and the Tremaine-Weinberg method, revealing differences in pattern speeds and bar classifications that inform galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It is the largest application of the Tremaine-Weinberg method to barred galaxies, providing new insights into bar evolution and formation mechanisms.
Findings
Strong bars have lower pattern speeds than weak bars.
Corotation radius differs between quenching and star-forming galaxies.
Distribution of ultrafast, fast, and slow bars varies with bar strength.
Abstract
We study the bar pattern speeds and corotation radii of 225 barred galaxies, using IFU data from MaNGA and the Tremaine-Weinberg method. Our sample, which is divided between strongly and weakly barred galaxies identified via Galaxy Zoo, is the largest that this method has been applied to. We find lower pattern speeds for strongly barred galaxies than for weakly barred galaxies. As simulations show that the pattern speed decreases as the bar exchanges angular momentum with its host, these results suggest that strong bars are more evolved than weak bars. Interestingly, the corotation radius is not different between weakly and strongly barred galaxies, despite being proportional to bar length. We also find that the corotation radius is significantly different between quenching and star forming galaxies. Additionally, we find that strongly barred galaxies have significantly lower values for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
