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3D barolo: a new 3D algorithm to derive rotation curves of galaxies
Author(s) -
Enrico M. Di Teodoro,
Filippo Fraternali
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
monthly notices of the royal astronomical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.058
H-Index - 383
eISSN - 1365-8711
pISSN - 0035-8711
DOI - 10.1093/mnras/stv1213
Subject(s) - physics , galaxy rotation curve , galaxy , rotation (mathematics) , astrophysics , redshift , algorithm , kinematics , line (geometry) , velocity dispersion , galaxy formation and evolution , geometry , computer science , artificial intelligence , classical mechanics , mathematics
We present ^{3{D}}BAROLO,† a new code that derives rotation curves of galaxies from emission-line observations. This software fits 3D tilted-ring models to spectroscopic data cubes and can be used with a variety of observations: from H I and molecular lines to optical/IR recombination lines. We describe the structure of the main algorithm and show that it performs much better than the standard 2D approach on velocity fields. A number of successful applications, from high to very low spatial resolution data are presented and discussed. ^{3D}BAROLO can recover the true rotation curve and estimate the intrinsic velocity dispersion even in barely resolved galaxies (˜2 resolution elements) provided that the signal to noise of the data is larger than 2-3. It can also be run automatically thanks to its source-detection and first-estimate modules, which make it suitable for the analysis of large 3D data sets. These features make ^{3D}BAROLO a uniquely useful tool to derive reliable kinematics for both local and high-redshift galaxies from a variety of different instruments including the new generation Integral Field Units, ALMA and the SKA pathfinders

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