Galaxy Zoo and SPARCFIRE: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles

In this paper, we study the morphological properties of spiral galaxies, including measurements of spiral arm number and pitch angle. Using Galaxy Zoo 2, a stellar mass-complete sample of 6222 SDSS spiral galaxies is selected. We use the machine vision algorithm sparcfire to identify spiral arm feat...

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Main Authors: Hart, Ross E., Bamford, Steven P., Hayes, Wayne B., Cardamone, Carolin N., Keel, William C., Kruk, Sandor J., Lintott, Chris J., Masters, Karen L., Simmons, Brooke D., Smethurst, Rebecca J.
Format: Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2017
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46875/
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author Hart, Ross E.
Bamford, Steven P.
Hayes, Wayne B.
Cardamone, Carolin N.
Keel, William C.
Kruk, Sandor J.
Lintott, Chris J.
Masters, Karen L.
Simmons, Brooke D.
Smethurst, Rebecca J.
author_facet Hart, Ross E.
Bamford, Steven P.
Hayes, Wayne B.
Cardamone, Carolin N.
Keel, William C.
Kruk, Sandor J.
Lintott, Chris J.
Masters, Karen L.
Simmons, Brooke D.
Smethurst, Rebecca J.
author_sort Hart, Ross E.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description In this paper, we study the morphological properties of spiral galaxies, including measurements of spiral arm number and pitch angle. Using Galaxy Zoo 2, a stellar mass-complete sample of 6222 SDSS spiral galaxies is selected. We use the machine vision algorithm sparcfire to identify spiral arm features and measure their associated geometries. A support vector machine classifier is employed to identify reliable spiral features, with which we are able to estimate pitch angles for half of our sample. We use these machine measurements to calibrate visual estimates of arm tightness, and hence estimate pitch angles for our entire sample. The properties of spiral arms are compared with respect to various galaxy properties. The star formation properties of galaxies vary significantly with arm number, but not pitch angle. We find that galaxies hosting strong bars have spiral arms substantially (4°-6°) looser than unbarred galaxies. Accounting for this, spiral arms associated with many-armed structures are looser (by 2°) than those in two-armed galaxies. In contrast to this average trend, galaxies with greater bulge-to-total stellar mass ratios display both fewer and looser spiral arms. This effect is primarily driven by the galaxy disc, such that galaxies with more massive discs contain more spiral arms with tighter pitch angles. This implies that galaxy central mass concentration is not the dominant cause of pitch angle and arm number variations between galaxies, which in turn suggests that not all spiral arms are governed by classical density waves or modal theories.
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spelling nottingham-468752020-05-04T19:53:56Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46875/ Galaxy Zoo and SPARCFIRE: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles Hart, Ross E. Bamford, Steven P. Hayes, Wayne B. Cardamone, Carolin N. Keel, William C. Kruk, Sandor J. Lintott, Chris J. Masters, Karen L. Simmons, Brooke D. Smethurst, Rebecca J. In this paper, we study the morphological properties of spiral galaxies, including measurements of spiral arm number and pitch angle. Using Galaxy Zoo 2, a stellar mass-complete sample of 6222 SDSS spiral galaxies is selected. We use the machine vision algorithm sparcfire to identify spiral arm features and measure their associated geometries. A support vector machine classifier is employed to identify reliable spiral features, with which we are able to estimate pitch angles for half of our sample. We use these machine measurements to calibrate visual estimates of arm tightness, and hence estimate pitch angles for our entire sample. The properties of spiral arms are compared with respect to various galaxy properties. The star formation properties of galaxies vary significantly with arm number, but not pitch angle. We find that galaxies hosting strong bars have spiral arms substantially (4°-6°) looser than unbarred galaxies. Accounting for this, spiral arms associated with many-armed structures are looser (by 2°) than those in two-armed galaxies. In contrast to this average trend, galaxies with greater bulge-to-total stellar mass ratios display both fewer and looser spiral arms. This effect is primarily driven by the galaxy disc, such that galaxies with more massive discs contain more spiral arms with tighter pitch angles. This implies that galaxy central mass concentration is not the dominant cause of pitch angle and arm number variations between galaxies, which in turn suggests that not all spiral arms are governed by classical density waves or modal theories. Oxford University Press 2017-12 Article PeerReviewed Hart, Ross E., Bamford, Steven P., Hayes, Wayne B., Cardamone, Carolin N., Keel, William C., Kruk, Sandor J., Lintott, Chris J., Masters, Karen L., Simmons, Brooke D. and Smethurst, Rebecca J. (2017) Galaxy Zoo and SPARCFIRE: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 472 (2). pp. 2263-2279. ISSN 1365-2966 methods: data analysis – galaxies: general – galaxies: spiral – galaxies: structure https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article/472/2/2263/4091436/Galaxy-Zoo-and-sparcfire-constraints-on-spiral-arm doi:10.1093/mnras/stx2137 doi:10.1093/mnras/stx2137
spellingShingle methods: data analysis – galaxies: general – galaxies: spiral – galaxies: structure
Hart, Ross E.
Bamford, Steven P.
Hayes, Wayne B.
Cardamone, Carolin N.
Keel, William C.
Kruk, Sandor J.
Lintott, Chris J.
Masters, Karen L.
Simmons, Brooke D.
Smethurst, Rebecca J.
Galaxy Zoo and SPARCFIRE: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles
title Galaxy Zoo and SPARCFIRE: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles
title_full Galaxy Zoo and SPARCFIRE: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles
title_fullStr Galaxy Zoo and SPARCFIRE: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles
title_full_unstemmed Galaxy Zoo and SPARCFIRE: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles
title_short Galaxy Zoo and SPARCFIRE: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles
title_sort galaxy zoo and sparcfire: constraints on spiral arm formation mechanisms from spiral arm number and pitch angles
topic methods: data analysis – galaxies: general – galaxies: spiral – galaxies: structure
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46875/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46875/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/46875/