The SAMI Galaxy Survey: physical drivers of stellar-gas kinematic misalignments in the nearby Universe

Author:

Ristea A12ORCID,Cortese L12ORCID,Fraser-McKelvie A12ORCID,Brough S23ORCID,Bryant J J245,Catinella B12ORCID,Croom S M24ORCID,Groves B12ORCID,Richards S N4,van de Sande J24,Bland-Hawthorn J245ORCID,Owers M S267ORCID,Lawrence J S8

Affiliation:

1. International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, The University of Western Australia , 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley WA 6009, Australia

2. ARC Centre of Excellence for All Sky Astrophysics in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO 3D) , Australia

3. School of Physics, University of New South Wales , NSW 2052, Australia

4. Sydney Institute for Astronomy (SIfA), School of Physics, The University of Sydney , NSW 2006, Australia

5. Australian Astronomical Optics, AAO-USydney, School of Physics, University of Sydney , NSW 2006, Australia

6. School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, Macquarie University , NSW 2109, Australia

7. Astronomy, Astrophysics and Astrophotonics Research Centre, Macquarie University , Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia

8. Australian Astronomical Optics, Macquarie University , 105 Delhi Rd, North Ryde, NSW 2113, Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACT Misalignments between the rotation axis of stars and gas are an indication of external processes shaping galaxies throughout their evolution. Using observations of 3068 galaxies from the SAMI Galaxy Survey, we compute global kinematic position angles for 1445 objects with reliable kinematics and identify 169 (12 per cent) galaxies which show stellar-gas misalignments. Kinematically decoupled features are more prevalent in early-type/passive galaxies compared to late-type/star-forming systems. Star formation is the main source of gas ionization in only 22 per cent of misaligned galaxies; 17 per cent are Seyfert objects, while 61 per cent show Low-Ionization Nuclear Emission-line Region features. We identify the most probable physical cause of the kinematic decoupling and find that, while accretion-driven cases are dominant, for up to 8 per cent of our sample, the misalignment may be tracing outflowing gas. When considering only misalignments driven by accretion, the acquired gas is feeding active star formation in only ∼1/4 of cases. As a population, misaligned galaxies have higher Sérsic indices and lower stellar spin and specific star formation rates than appropriately matched samples of aligned systems. These results suggest that both morphology and star formation/gas content are significantly correlated with the prevalence and timescales of misalignments. Specifically, torques on misaligned gas discs are smaller for more centrally concentrated galaxies, while the newly accreted gas feels lower viscous drag forces in more gas-poor objects. Marginal evidence of star formation not being correlated with misalignment likelihood for late-type galaxies suggests that such morphologies in the nearby Universe might be the result of preferentially aligned accretion at higher redshifts.

Funder

Australian Research Council

ARC

SAMI)

Anglo-Australian Observatory

Australian Government

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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