A multiwavelength overview of the giant spiral UGC 2885
Matheus C. Carvalho, Bavithra Naguleswaran, Pauline Barmby, Mark, Gorski, Sabine K\"oenig, Benne Holwerda, Jason E. Young

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed multiwavelength analysis of UGC 2885, revealing its high metallicity, enormous molecular gas reservoir, and unusual star formation characteristics, offering insights into the evolution of massive spiral galaxies.
Contribution
The paper presents new multiwavelength observations and detailed measurements of UGC 2885's metallicity, molecular gas, and star formation, highlighting its unique properties among massive spiral galaxies.
Findings
UGC 2885 has extremely high metallicity and molecular gas content.
The galaxy exhibits a low star formation rate relative to its gas reservoir.
Evidence suggests star formation cycles and possible quenching mechanisms like a molecular bar.
Abstract
UGC 2885 (z = 0.01935) is one of the largest and most massive galaxies in the local Universe, yet its undisturbed spiral structure is unexpected for such an object and unpredicted in cosmological simulations. Understanding the detailed properties of extreme systems such as UGC 2885 can provide insight on the limits of scaling relations and physical processes driving galaxy evolution. Our goal is to understand whether UGC 2885 has followed a similar evolutionary path to other high-mass galaxies by examining its place on the fundamental metallicity relation and the star-forming main sequence. We present new observations of UGC 2885 with the CFHT and IRAM 30-m telescopes. These novel data are used to respectively calculate metallicity and molecular hydrogen mass values. We estimate stellar mass (M*) and star formation rate (SFR) based on mid-infrared observations with the Wide-field…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Sesquiterpenes and Asteraceae Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
