In the solution of the Jeans equations for axisymmetric galaxy models, the 'b-ansatz' is often adopted to prescribe the relation between the vertical and radial components of the velocity dispersion tensor, and close the equations. However, b affects the resulting azimuthal velocity fields quite indirectly, so that the analysis of the model kinematics is usually performed after numerically solving the Jeans equations, a time-consuming approach. In a previous work, we presented a general method to determine the main properties of the kinematical fields resulting in the b-ansatz framework before solving the Jeans equations; results were illustrated by means of disc galaxy models. In this paper, we focus more specifically on realistic ellipsoidal galaxy models. It is found that how and where b affects the galaxy kinematical fields is mainly dependent on the flattening of the stellar density distribution, moderately on the presence of a dark matter halo, and much less on the specific galaxy density profile. The main trends revealed by the numerical exploration, in particular the fact that more flattened systems can support larger b-anisotropy, are explained with the aid of simple ellipsoidal galaxy models, for which most of the analysis can be conducted analytically. The obtained results can be adopted as guidelines for model building and in the interpretation of observational data.
De Deo, L., Ciotti, L., Pellegrini, S. (2025). Anisotropy ansatz for the Jeans equations: oblate galaxies. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 544(2), 2200-2213 [10.1093/mnras/staf1894].
Anisotropy ansatz for the Jeans equations: oblate galaxies
De Deo L.
Primo
;Ciotti L.Secondo
;Pellegrini S.Ultimo
2025
Abstract
In the solution of the Jeans equations for axisymmetric galaxy models, the 'b-ansatz' is often adopted to prescribe the relation between the vertical and radial components of the velocity dispersion tensor, and close the equations. However, b affects the resulting azimuthal velocity fields quite indirectly, so that the analysis of the model kinematics is usually performed after numerically solving the Jeans equations, a time-consuming approach. In a previous work, we presented a general method to determine the main properties of the kinematical fields resulting in the b-ansatz framework before solving the Jeans equations; results were illustrated by means of disc galaxy models. In this paper, we focus more specifically on realistic ellipsoidal galaxy models. It is found that how and where b affects the galaxy kinematical fields is mainly dependent on the flattening of the stellar density distribution, moderately on the presence of a dark matter halo, and much less on the specific galaxy density profile. The main trends revealed by the numerical exploration, in particular the fact that more flattened systems can support larger b-anisotropy, are explained with the aid of simple ellipsoidal galaxy models, for which most of the analysis can be conducted analytically. The obtained results can be adopted as guidelines for model building and in the interpretation of observational data.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
staf1894.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipo:
Versione (PDF) editoriale / Version Of Record
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
2.15 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
2.15 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


