S. Garcia-burillo et al., Anatomy of the counterrotating molecular disk in the spiral NGC 3593 (CO)-C-12(1-0) interferometer observations and numerical simulations, ASTRON ASTR, 363(3), 2000, pp. 869-886
This paper presents high-resolution (4 " x3 ") interferometer observations
of the inner disk of the starburst spiral NGC 3593, made in the (1-0) line
of (CO)-C-12. NGC 3593 is an early-type system known to possess two counter
rotating stellar disks of markedly different scale lengths and masses. The
CO emission comes from a highly structured molecular gas disk of M-gas simi
lar to 3 x 10(8) M., and total radial extent r similar to 35 ". The observe
d CO kinematics indicates that the molecular gas is counterrotating at all
radii with respect to the most massive stellar disk (disk I).
The bulk of the CO emission arises from a ringed circumnuclear disk (CND) o
f radius r similar to 10 " and mass M-gas similar to 1.5 x 10(8) M., which
hosts a nuclear starburst. The link between the starburst and the CND is co
rroborated by high-resolution observations of other star formation tracers
(H alpha, Pa alpha and J - K color index maps). The starburst episode is fu
eling the less massive counterrotating stellar disk (disk II). We find exti
nctions A(V) of similar to 1 mag in the CND based on optical and near-infra
red recombination lines, but find > 5 mag from the CO and 100 mum fluxes.
Out of the CND, molecular gas is distributed in a one-arm spiral feature wh
ich winds up tightly from the edges of the CND (r similar to 10 ") up to r
similar to 35 ". The CO one-arm spiral is leading with respect to the gas f
low in the southern half of the disk. There is a secondary trailing spiral
are in the northern half The analysis of streaming motions linked with the
passage of the CO one-arm spiral indicates that the southern feature would
be a stationary m = 1 instability (pattern speed Omega (p) similar to 0).
To account for the observed gas response in the disk of NGC 3593, we have r
un self-consistent numerical simulations, including the stellar and the gas
eous components, in a physical scenario which approximates this case of stu
dy. We discuss the rapidly changing response of the disk, which evolves fro
m a transitory regime, in which all instabilities are m = 1 waves leading w
ith respect to the counterrotating gas, towards a stationary regime, in whi
ch m = 1 are mixed with m = 2 features, trailing with respect to the gas fl
ow at all radii. In the light of the present simulations, NGC 3593 might be
starting to change from the transitory towards the stationary regime.