Tracing the dynamical and structural complexity of spiral galaxy centres
Iris Breda, Glenn van de Ven, Sabine Thater, J. Falc\'on-Barroso, Prashin Jethwa, Masato Onodera, Joop Schaye, Jarle Brinchmann, Bodo Ziegler, Federica Mauro

TL;DR
This study reveals the complex structural and dynamical diversity of galaxy centers, challenging traditional models by analyzing stellar orbit contributions with a new tool across high-resolution galaxy data.
Contribution
Developed GLANCE, a novel analysis tool, and applied it to 8 galaxies to uncover diverse central structures and orbital compositions, emphasizing the need for improved decomposition methods.
Findings
Most galaxies with nuclear disks are classical bulges.
Cold orbit contributions are often less than the total, indicating hot or counter-rotating components.
Structural diversity includes exponential, doughnut-shaped, and steep inner profiles.
Abstract
The formation of late-type galaxies has traditionally been described via two pathways: one producing pressure-supported classical bulges, the other rotationally supported pseudo-bulges. Early studies relied on photometric decompositions assuming an exponential disk extrapolated inwards. Recent high-resolution observations, however, reveal a far more complex landscape in disk galaxy centres. We investigated the morphology of central stellar components in intermediate-to-massive spiral galaxies, focusing on disentangling cold, warm, and hot orbital contributions, critically reassessing the standard approach of extrapolating the exponential disk profile inwards. We developed GLANCE (Galactic archaeoLogy via chronochemicAl and dyNamiCal modElling), a tool for photometric, chronochemical, and dynamical galaxy analysis, applied to 8 high-resolution MUSE galaxies to derive stellar population…
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