A Nearby Analog of z~2 Compact Quiescent Galaxies with a Rotating Disk
Abstract
Recent studies have identified a population of compact quiescent galaxies at z2. These galaxies are very rare today and establishing the existence of a nearby analog could allow us to study its structure in greater detail than is possible at high redshift. Here we present such a local analog, NGC 5845, which has a dynamical mass of Mdyn = 4.30.6×1010 Msun and an effective radius of only re = 0.450.05kpc. We study the structure and kinematics with HST/WFPC2 data and previously published spatially resolved kinematics. We find that NGC 5845 is similar to compact quiescent galaxies at z2 in terms of size versus dynamical mass (re-Mdyn), effective velocity dispersion versus size (sigmae-re), and effective velocity dispersion versus dynamical mass (sigmae-Mdyn). The galaxy has a prominent rotating disk evident in both the photometry and the kinematics: it extends to well beyond ≥1/3 effective radius and contribute to ≥1/4 of the total light of the galaxy. Our results lend support to the idea that a fraction of z2 compact galaxies have prominent disks and positive mass-to-light ratio gradients, although we caution that NGC 5845 may have had a different formation history than the more massive compact quiescent galaxies at z2.
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