Bibcode
DOI
Arribas, Santiago; Colina, Luis
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 591, Issue 2, pp. 791-800.
Fecha de publicación:
7
2003
Revista
Número de citas
23
Número de citas referidas
23
Descripción
New integral field optical fiber spectroscopy obtained with the INTEGRAL
system, together with archival HST WFPC2 and NICMOS images, has been
used to investigate the ultraluminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) IRAS
17208-0014, one of the coldest and most luminous objects in the IRAS 1
Jy sample. We have found that the optical nucleus is not coincident with
the true (near-IR and dynamical) nucleus, but that it is displaced by
1.3 kpc (1.5") from it. As a consequence, the previous optical spectral
classifications for the nucleus of this galaxy have to be changed from H
II to LINER. The ionized gas emission is concentrated around the optical
nucleus, where a young (5-6 Myr), massive [(3+/-1)×108
Msolar], and luminous [(6+/-2)×1010
Lsolar] starburst is detected. Contrary to what is found in
dynamically young ULIRGs, no strong line emission tracing star-forming
regions, or tidal dwarf galaxies, is detected in the inner parts of the
tidal tails. The two-dimensional gas velocity field identifies the
optically faint K-band nucleus as the dynamical nucleus of the galaxy
and shows that the 3 kpc, tilted (i~35deg) disk is rotating
at Δvsini=250 km s-1. Radial motions of gas are found
along the minor kinematic axis, which, according to the geometry of the
system, are well interpreted as inflows perpendicular to the inner disk.
The existence of such inflows supports the idea that, as a consequence
of the merging process, gas is channeling from the external regions,
several kiloparsecs away, into the nuclear regions where the massive
starburst reported above is taking place. The kinematical,
morphological, and photometric evidence presented here supports the idea
that in IRAS 17208-0014 we are witnessing a luminous, cool ULIRG that is
at the final coalescence phase of a system composed of two spiral
galaxies with m<=m* and a mass ratio of ~2:1, each
consisting of a disk+bulge internal structure, that have been involved
in a prograde encounter. This system will most likely evolve into an
intermediate-mass (~L*) elliptical galaxy. The multifrequency empirical
evidence gathered so far shows no trace of a luminous QSO and indicates
that starbursts dominate the energy output in this galaxy. Therefore,
IRAS 17208-0014 does not follow the behavior expected in the
``ULIRG-to-QSO'' evolutionary scenario proposed by Sanders et al., but
it supports the one recently proposed by Colina et al., in which two
low-mass disk galaxies would produce luminous, cool ULIRGs that would
not evolve into QSOs. The present study illustrates some caveats to bear
in mind when studying high-z galaxies lacking two-dimensional spectral
information of adequate linear resolution and shows that near- and
mid-IR integral field spectroscopy is needed to derive the relevant
astrophysical quantities.
Based on observations with the William Herschel Telescope, operated on
the island of La Palma by the ING in the Spanish Observatorio del Roque
de los Muchachos of the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias.
Based also on observations with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope
(HST), obtained at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is
operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy
(AURA), Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555.