• Title/Summary/Keyword: barred

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A Comparative Study on Star Formation of Barred and Unbarred Disk Galaxies from SDSS-IV MaNGA IFU survey

  • Zee, Galaxy Woong-bae;Yoon, Suk-jin
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.42 no.2
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    • pp.77.2-77.2
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    • 2017
  • We investigate star formation activities of ~400 barred and unbarred faced-on late-type galaxies from the SDSS-IV MaNGA (Mapping Nearby Galaxies at APO) IFU survey. We find the star formation activities in gas-poor, barred galaxies are considerably suppressed than gas-rich, barred galaxies, while there is no difference among unbarred galaxies regardless of their HI gas content. The gas-poor and barred galaxies show the steeper difference of gradient in metallicity and age with respect to the stellar mass than gas-rich or unbarred galaxies, in that their centre is more metal-rich and younger. The results suggest that, combined with the gas contents available, the bar structure plays a significant role in quenching star formation in a galaxy by transporting/mixing gas via gas inflow.

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Isolation, Molecular Phylogeny, and Tissue Distribution of Four cDNAs Encoding the Apolipoprotein Multigene Family in Barred Knifejaw, Oplegnathus fasciatus (Teleostei, Perciformes)

  • Kim, Keun-Yong;Cho, Young-Sun;Kim, Sung-Koo;Nam, Yoon-Kwon
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.11 no.2
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    • pp.88-97
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    • 2008
  • Lipoproteins are complexes of lipids and specific apolipoproteins that are involved in lipid transport and redistribution among various tissues. In this study, we isolated full-length apolipoprotein cDNA sequences encoding apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), apoE, apoC-II, and apo-14 kDa in barred knifejaw, Oplegnathus fasciatus. In addition, we reconstructed phylogenetic trees and investigated mRNA tissue distributions. Alignment analyses of amino acid sequences revealed that secondary structures of the polypeptides apoA-I, apoE, and apoC-II in barred knifejaw are well conserved with their teleostean and mammalian counterparts in terms of characteristic tandem repetitive units forming amphipathic ${\alpha}$-helices. Both the sequence alignment data and cleavage sites of apo-14 kDa indicated a clear differentiation between Percomorpha and Cypriniformes. Meanwhile, the phylogenetic trees of apolipoprotein sub-families suggested that the common ancestor prior to the split of the Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes) and Sarcopterygii (tetrapods) would have possessed the primordial protein-encoding genes. Tissue distribution of each apolipoprotein transcript determined by semi-quantitative RTPCR showed that barred knifejaw apoA-I transcripts were more or less ubiquitously expressed in the liver, intestines, brain, muscle, spleen, and kidney. The most striking difference from previous observations on barred knifejaw was the ubiquitous expression of apoE across all somatic tissues. Barred knifejaw apoC-II showed tissue-specific expression in the liver and intestines, while the liver and brain were the major sites of apo-14kDa mRNA synthesis.

A new approach to classify barred galaxies based on the potential map

  • Lee, Yun Hee;Park, Myeong-Gu;Ann, Hong Bae;Kim, Taehyun;Seo, Woo-Young
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.44 no.1
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    • pp.33.3-33.3
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    • 2019
  • Automatic, yet reliable methods to find and classify barred galaxies are going to be more important in the era of large galaxy surveys. Here, we introduce a new approach to classify barred galaxies by analyzing the butterfly pattern that Buta & Block (2001) reported as a bar signature on the potential map. We make it easy to find the pattern by moving the ratio map from a Cartesian coordinate to a polar coordinate. Our volume-limited sample consists of 1698 spiral galaxies brighter than Mr = -15.2 with z < 0.01 from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey/DR7 visually classified by Ann et al. (2015). We compared the results of the classification obtained by four different methods: visual inspection, ellipse fitting, Fourier analysis, and our new method. We obtain, for the same sample, different bar fractions of 63%, 48%, 36%, and 56% by visual inspection, ellipse fitting, Fourier analysis, and our new approach, respectively. Although automatic classifications detect visually determined, strongly barred galaxies with the concordance of 74% to 86%, automatically selected barred galaxies contain different amount of weak bars. We find a different dependence of bar fraction on the Hubble type for strong and weak bars: SBs are preponderant in early-type spirals, whereas SABs are in late-type spirals. Moreover, the ellipse fitting method often misses strongly barred galaxies in the bulge-dominated galaxies. These explain why previous works showed the contradictory dependence of the bar fraction on the host galaxy properties. Our new method has the highest agreement with visual inspection in terms of the individual classification and the overall bar fraction. In addition, we find another signature on the ratio map to classify barred galaxies into new two classes that are probably related to the age of the bar.

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Stimulated mRNA Expression of the Second Glyceraldehyde 3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase in the Barred Knifejaw Oplegnathus fasciatus Spleen during Bacterial and Viral Injection

  • Lee, Sang-Yoon;Nam, Yoon-Kwon
    • Journal of Aquaculture
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.51-55
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    • 2009
  • Transcriptional response of the second isoform of glyceraldehyde (GAPDH-2) to infectious challenges using various bacterial species and the rockbream iridovirus (RBIV) was examined in the spleen of the barred knifejaw (Oplegnathus fasciatus). Bacterial challenges of the juvenile barred knifejaws with Escherichia coli, Edwardsiella tarda, Vibrio anguillarum and Streptococcus iniae resulted in the significant elevation of the GAPDH-2 transcripts in the spleen up to 12-fold relative to that in the non-challenged controls (PBS-injected). In addition, the barred knifejaw fingerlings injected with RBIV stock also represented the highly upregulated mRNA expression of the GAPDH-2 up to more than 20-fold when compared to that of control fingerings. Results obtained from this study strongly suggest that the GAPDH-2 is no longer a housekeeping glycolytic protein and rather than that it might be associated with immune-relevant cellular activities. From this finding, the traditional dogma for the use of GAPDH as an invariant standard for gene expression assays should be carefully revised depending on the kinds of biological stimulations applied in this species.

SURFACE PHOTOMETRY OF BARRED GALAXIES: GLOBAL STRUCTURE OF BARRED GALAXIES

  • Ann, Hong-Sik;Lee, See-Woo
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.20 no.2
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    • pp.49-62
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    • 1987
  • Using the detailed two-dimensional surface photometry of 39 galaxies, the observed profiles are decomposed into spheroid, disk and bar components simultaneously. From the analyses of decomposition parameters, the correlations among the three components are investigated to find the global property of barred galaxies. And the lens and ring components, and spiral arm patterns are also examined with Hubble type and decomposition parameters.

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SURFACE PHOTOMETRY OF BARRED GALAXIES.: I. MORPHOLOGY

  • Ann, Hong-Bae
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.19 no.2
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    • pp.69-89
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    • 1986
  • The global morphology and geometric parameters of 39 barred galaxies are investigated, by using isophote map and isodensity tracings obtained from detailed surface photometry with the Kiso V-band plates. The observed results are as follows: i) There is no strong indication that the ratio of bar length to disk size is correlated with Hubble type, except that the largest bars appear in the SBb galaxies. ii) The mean value of axial ratios of bars is $2.0{\pm}0.4$ and there is a trend that early type galaxies have smaller axial ratios than late type galaxies. iii) About 15% of early type barred galaxies(Sb0-SBb) have triaxial bulges.

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TRIAXIAL BULGES IN BARRED GALAXIES

  • Ann, Hong-Bae
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.28 no.2
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    • pp.209-221
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    • 1995
  • We have examined bulge morphology of 104 bright barred galaxies, using V-band surface photometry based on the Kiso Schmidt plates. By measuring the bulge ellipticity and bulge-disk misalignment, we have classified bulges into four morphological types: sphere, oblate spheroid, triaxial ellipsoid, and pseudo triaxial ellipsoid. About half of the observed galaxies are found to have triaxial bulges with mean ellipticity of 0.24. They are distributed uniformly along the Hubble sequence.

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Reliability of the Tremaine-Weinberg Method for Measuring Multiple Pattern Speeds in Barred-Spiral Galaxies

  • Kim, Yonghwi;Kim, Woong-Tae
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.31.1-31.1
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    • 2013
  • Barred-spiral galaxies possess double patterns: a bar and spiral arms. While their angular speeds play an important role in governing gas dynamical evolution of barred spiral galaxies, there is no direct way to observe them. The Tremaine-Weinberg (TW) method has been one of the most reliable indirect methods to estimate pattern speeds, although it requires a few strict assumptions, notably one that the gas tracer is in a quasi-steady state. In barred-spiral galaxies, however, non-steady gas flows are significant especially when the double patterns have different angular speeds. Using numerical models, we explore the effect of non-steady gas motions on the determination of double pattern speeds based on the TW method. We find that the TW method is accurate within 15% when there is only a single pattern or when double patterns have the same angular speed. When double patterns have different speeds, on the other hand, neglecting the non-steady flows leads to quite large errors (> 30%) in the derived pattern speeds, and severely underestimate the real values for the viewing angle parallel to the bar minor axis. This suggests that one should be cautious when applying the TW method to galaxies with double patterns with different speeds.

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SPH SIMULATIONS OF BARRED GALAXIES: DYNAMICAL EVOLUTION OF GASEOUS DISK

  • ANN HONG BAE;LEE HVUNG MOK
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.33 no.1
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    • pp.1-17
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    • 2000
  • We have performed extensive simulations of response of gaseous disk in barred galaxies using SPH method. The gravitational potential is assumed to be generated by disk, bulge, halo, and bar. The mass of gaseous disk in SPH simulation is assumed to be negligible compared to the stellar and dark mass component, and the gravitational potential generated by other components is fixed in time. The self-gravity of the gas is not considered in most simulations, but we have made a small set of simulations including the self-gravity of the gas. Non-circular component of velocity generated by the rotating, non-axisymmetric potential causes many interesting features. In most cases, there is a strong tendency of concentration of gas toward the central parts of the galaxy. The morphology of the gas becomes quite complex, but the general behavior can be understood in terms of simple linear approximations: the locations and number of Lindblad resonances play critical role in determining the general distribution of the gas. We present our results in the form of 'atlas' of artificial galaxies. We also make a brief comment on the observational implications of our calculations. Since the gaseous component show interesting features while the stellar component behaves more smoothly, high resolution mapping using molecular emission line for barred galaxies would be desirable.

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Barred Galaxies Are More Abundant in Interacting Clusters: Bar Formation by Cluster-Cluster Interactions

  • Yoon, Yongmin;Im, Myungshin;Lee, Seong-Kook;Lee, Gwang-Ho;Lim, Gu
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.43 no.2
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    • pp.35.1-35.1
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    • 2018
  • Bars are commonly found in disk galaxies. However, how bars form is yet unclear. There are two common pictures for the bar formation mechanism. Bars form through a physical process inherent in galaxies, or through and external process like galaxy-galaxy interaction. In this paper, we present the observational evidence that bars can form from another channel, namely a cluster-cluster interaction. We examined 105 galaxy clusters at 0.015

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