Hubbry Logo
search
logo
2145577

Ring galaxy

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia
Hoag's Object, a ring galaxy. Another red ring galaxy can be seen behind it.

A ring galaxy is a type of galaxy that includes a large annular structure. The galactic center may be relatively separate from the ring structure, or present a continuous disc shape. Hoag's Object, discovered by Arthur Hoag in 1950, is an example of a ring galaxy.[1] The ring contains many massive, relatively young blue stars, which are extremely bright. The central region contains relatively little luminous matter. Some astronomers believe that ring galaxies are formed when a smaller galaxy passes through the center of a larger galaxy. Because most of a galaxy consists of empty space, this "collision" rarely results in any actual collisions between stars. However, the gravitational disruptions caused by such an event could cause a wave of star formation to move through the larger galaxy.[2] Other astronomers think that rings are formed around some galaxies when external accretion takes place. Star formation would then take place in the accreted material because of the shocks and compressions of the accreted material.[3][4]

Formation theories

[edit]

All of the processes that form ring galaxies appear to cause significant effects on stellar populations. Based on observations of the spectrum of the ring structures, there appears to be very high star formation rates caused by the outwards pressure wave.[5] The regions also have very high metallicities, supporting the idea of a significant amount of evolution of the stellar population within the ring.[6] The methods ring galaxies are theorized to be formed through include, but are not limited to, the scenarios listed below:

Bar instability

[edit]

A phenomenon where the rotational velocity of the bar in a barred spiral galaxy increases to the point of spiral spin-out. Under typical conditions, gravitational density waves would favor the creation of spiral arms. When the bar is unstable, these density waves are instead migrated out into a ring-structure by the pressure, force, and gravitational influence of the baryonic and dark matter furiously orbiting about the bar. This migration forces the stars, gas and dust found within the former arms into a torus-like region, forming a ring, and often igniting star formation.

Galaxies with this structure have been found where the bar dominates, and essentially "carves out" the ring of the disc as it rotates. Oppositely, ring galaxies have been found where the bar has collapsed or disintegrated into a highly-flattened bulge.

Other instabilities have been predicted due to asymmetries caused by spiral arms, which creates a net torque depending on the pattern of the bar. This torque creates a resonance instability that drives matter from the arms both outwards and inwards towards the core, creating the distinct ring and core structure.[7]

Despite this, observations suggest that bars, rings and spiral arms have the ability to fall apart and reform over the span of hundreds of millions of years, particularly in dense intergalactic environments, such as galaxy groups and clusters, where gravitational influences are more likely to play a role in the morphological and physical evolution of a galaxy without the influence of collisions and mergers.

Galactic collisions

[edit]

Another observed way that ring galaxies can form is through the process of two or more galaxies colliding. The Cartwheel Galaxy, galaxy pair AM 2026-424, and Arp 147 are all examples of ring galaxies thought to be formed by this process.[7]

In pass-through galactic collisions, or bullseye collisions, an often smaller donor galaxy will pass directly through the disc of an often larger spiral, causing an outward push of the arms from the gravity of the smaller galaxy, as if dropping a rock into a pond of still water. These collisions can either launch the bulge and core away from the main disk, creating an almost empty ring appearance as the shockwave pushes the spiral arms out, or shove the core out towards the disk, often creating an oval-shaped ring with the bulge still somewhat intact.[8] In side-swipe and head-on collisions, the appearance of a perfect ring are less likely, with chaotic and warped appearances dominating. In these collisional galaxy systems, the individual galaxies that made up the ring system are often still observable.[7]

Rings formed through collision processes are believed to be transient features of the affected galaxies, lasting only a few ten to hundred million years (a relatively short timeframe considering some mergers can take over a billion years to complete) before disintegrating, reforming into spiral arms, or succumbing to further disturbance from gravitational influence.[9]

Ring Accretion

[edit]

Intergalactic Medium Accretion

[edit]

This method has been inferred through the existence of Hoag's object, along with UV observations of several other large and ultra-large super spiral galaxies and current formation theories of spiral galaxies.

UV-light observations show several cases of faint, ring-like and spiral structures of hot young stars that have formed along the network of cooled inflowing gas, extending far from the visible luminous galactic disc. If conditions are favorable, a ring can form in the place of a spiral structure. Polar-ring galaxies may form through cold accretion, as gas from the galaxy filament flows into the disk and halo regions of a galaxy early in evolution. Resulting star formation interferes with the formation of spiral structures in the stellar disk, and a stable ring structure is created. Similarly, pre-existing elliptical galaxies may also experience cold accretion and result in polar-ring galaxies.[10]

Since some spiral galaxies are theorized to have formed from massive clouds of intergalactic gas collapsing and then rotationally forming into a disc structure, one could assume that a ring disc could form in place of a spiral disc if, as mentioned before, conditions are favorable. This holds true for protogalaxies, or galaxies just throughout to be forming, and old galaxies that have migrated into a section of space with a higher gas content than its previous locations.

Tidal Accretion

[edit]

Besides intergalactic medium accretion, tidal interactions between a gas-rich host galaxy and a donor galaxy in a polar orbit may lead to the formation of polar-ring galaxies. Observations indicate that rings formed through accretion have a greater inclination angle, compared to rings formed through merging galaxies, as some angular momentum from the gas of the donor galaxy is lost through dispersion; consequentially, the inclination angle is allowed to deviate from the donor. The accretion model is particularly insightful for galaxies with rings that intersect with the central portion's poles, as opposed to lying along the same orbital plane.[11]

[edit]

See also

[edit]
  • List of ring galaxies – Astronomical objects
  • Interacting galaxy – Galaxies with interacting gravitational fields
  • Hoag's object – Galaxy in the constellation Serpens Caput
  • Cartwheel Galaxy – Galaxy in the constellation Sculptor
  • AM 0644-741 – Ring galaxy in the constellation of Volans
  • Arp 147 – Interacting galaxy in the constellation Cetus
  • Polar-ring galaxy – Type of galaxy in which an outer ring of gas and stars rotates over the poles of the galaxy
  • LEDA 1000714 – Hoag-type ring galaxy in the constellation Crater

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A ring galaxy is a type of galaxy characterized by a prominent annular structure of stars, gas, and dust encircling a relatively compact central nucleus, distinguishing it from more common spiral or elliptical galaxies.[1] These structures can appear as complete rings or partial pseudo-rings and are observed in approximately 20% of spiral galaxies in the local Universe.[1] Ring galaxies form through two primary mechanisms: collisional interactions and resonant dynamics. In collisional ring galaxies, a smaller companion galaxy passes through the disk of a larger spiral galaxy, creating expanding density waves that trigger star formation along the ring, as exemplified by the prototype Cartwheel Galaxy, located about 500 million light-years away in the Sculptor constellation.[2][3][4] Resonant rings, on the other hand, arise from the accumulation of gas at specific orbital resonances induced by a central bar in the galaxy, leading to inner, outer, or nuclear rings without requiring external mergers.[1] These formations often result in enhanced star formation rates, with rings hosting bright HII regions and young stellar clusters, while the central regions may contain older stellar populations.[2][1] Notable examples include the Cartwheel Galaxy, which features a bright inner ring of hot dust and young stars connected to an outer ring by spoke-like features, and Hoag's Object, a rare non-collisional ring galaxy with a yellow nucleus surrounded by a blue ring of young stars.[4][2] Observations from telescopes like Hubble and the James Webb Space Telescope have revealed intricate details, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and silicate dust in these rings, highlighting their role in galaxy evolution.[4] Ring galaxies provide key insights into dynamical processes, with collisional types being rarer due to the specific geometry required for ring formation.[2]

Definition and Characteristics

Definition

A ring galaxy is characterized by a prominent annular structure composed of stars, gas, and dust, forming a complete or near-complete ring that encircles a central core, which may be offset or separate from the ring itself.[5] This configuration distinguishes ring galaxies from more common types such as spirals, which feature winding arms extending from a central bulge, or ellipticals, which exhibit a smooth, featureless distribution of older stars without such discrete rings.[6] The ring typically appears as an elliptical or circular luminous feature, often with regions of active star formation, contrasting with partial arc-like structures or diffuse lenses found in other galaxy morphologies. Ring galaxies were first systematically identified in the mid-20th century, with the prototype example, Hoag's Object, discovered in 1950 by astronomer Arthur A. Hoag while surveying photographic plates. Initially mistaken for a planetary nebula due to its symmetrical appearance, Hoag's Object was soon recognized as a peculiar galaxy, marking the beginning of interest in this rare class of objects.[7] Subsequent observations confirmed that true ring galaxies possess a well-defined ring surrounding a core, setting them apart from "ringed" galaxies where rings are secondary features superimposed on spiral or barred structures without fully dominating the morphology.[8]

Morphological and Physical Properties

Ring galaxies exhibit a distinctive morphology characterized by a prominent outer ring surrounding a central core or bulge. The central region typically consists of older, redder stars with low gas content, forming a compact bulge or nucleus that is relatively quiescent. In contrast, the outer ring is composed of younger, bluer stars, interspersed with regions of active star formation and higher metallicity gas, often appearing as bright knots or clusters along the ring's structure.[9] In terms of scale, the rings in these galaxies typically span diameters of 50-150 kiloparsecs, while the central core is much smaller, ranging from 5-20 kiloparsecs in diameter. For instance, the Cartwheel Galaxy's outer ring measures approximately 50 kiloparsecs across, with its inner core spanning about 10 kiloparsecs. These dimensions highlight the expansive nature of the ring relative to the compact nucleus.[10] Kinematically, the outer rings display rotational velocities driven by density waves, with typical speeds of 150-200 kilometers per second, contributing to elevated star formation rates that can reach 10-100 solar masses per year concentrated in the ring. In the Cartwheel Galaxy, for example, the ring's expansion velocity is about 52 kilometers per second superimposed on a rising rotation curve, fueling a star formation rate of approximately 67 solar masses per year. This dynamic activity contrasts with the more stable, lower-velocity kinematics of the central core.[10] Spectrally, the outer rings show a blue continuum dominated by young, massive stars, accompanied by strong emission lines such as Hα and [NII] that signal ongoing starburst activity. The central cores, however, exhibit redder spectra indicative of older stellar populations with minimal ionized gas emission. These characteristics underscore the ring's role as a site of vigorous, recent star formation, while the core represents an evolved, gas-poor component.[10] Ring galaxies, particularly collisional types, are relatively rare, a scarcity linked to their transient evolutionary stages.[11]

Formation Mechanisms

Galactic Collisions

Galactic collisions represent a primary mechanism for the formation of ring galaxies, particularly through head-on or near-head-on encounters between a smaller companion galaxy and a larger disk galaxy. In this process, the smaller galaxy passes through the disk of the larger one in a nearly perpendicular trajectory, delivering an impulsive gravitational perturbation that compresses interstellar gas and stars. This compression initiates a radially expanding density wave, where material is displaced outward from the galactic center, forming a prominent ring structure as the wave propagates through the disk.[10] The dynamics of such collisions involve the excitation of epicyclic oscillations in the stellar and gaseous components of the disk, leading to the bunching of orbits at specific radii and the creation of high-density caustics that define the ring's edges. Gas in the disk is particularly responsive, being expelled outward along the density wave, where it cools and fragments, triggering intense star formation that illuminates the ring as a bright, blue feature rich in young, massive stars. Meanwhile, the galactic core, dominated by older stars on more stable orbits, remains relatively undisturbed, preserving the central bulge and inner disk morphology. These non-merging encounters allow the ring to evolve independently while the companion continues its trajectory, often exiting the system without significant dynamical coupling.[10] Ring formation typically unfolds over a timescale of 10 to 100 million years following the collision, during which the density wave expands at velocities of tens to hundreds of kilometers per second, depending on the galaxy's rotation and the impact parameters. This rapid evolution contrasts with the longer dynamical timescales of isolated galaxies, making collisional rings transient features in galactic morphology.[10][12] Observational evidence for this mechanism is robustly supported by numerical simulations, beginning with the kinematic impulse approximation models of Lynds and Toomre in the 1970s, which predicted ring formation from perpendicular impacts without full mergers. These early models have been refined through modern N-body and hydrodynamical simulations, which accurately reproduce observed ring expansions, asymmetries, and star formation patterns in non-merging scenarios, such as the Cartwheel Galaxy. For instance, simulations demonstrate how the ring's radial velocity and inner structure evolve in close agreement with kinematic predictions during the initial post-collision phase.[10]

Bar Instability

In barred spiral galaxies, the central bar structure exerts gravitational torque on the surrounding disk, destabilizing stellar and gaseous orbits and leading to the formation of ring-like features through internal dynamical processes. This bar instability arises from the non-axisymmetric potential of the bar, which amplifies perturbations and drives the redistribution of material without requiring external interactions. Seminal N-body and hydrodynamic simulations have demonstrated that this instability can spontaneously generate elongated orbits aligned with the bar, fostering density enhancements that evolve into coherent ring structures.[13] The process begins with gas inflows channeled along the bar due to its torque, which funnels interstellar medium toward the galactic center. Upon reaching regions of orbital resonances, such as the inner Lindblad resonance (ILR), the gas accumulates and loses angular momentum, piling up to form nuclear rings—compact, circumnuclear structures often spanning a few kiloparsecs. For outer rings, material at the corotation radius, where the bar's pattern speed matches the orbital speed of the disk, can similarly cluster into extended annular features via trapped orbits that librate around stable points. These rings emerge from the invariant manifolds of periodic orbits around unstable Lagrangian points in the bar's rotating potential, creating density waves that enhance the ring morphology over time. In models with low gas sound speeds (around 1 km/s), viscous shear stabilizes these accumulations against dissipation, allowing persistent ring formation.[13][14][15][16] This mechanism is particularly applicable to inner nuclear rings in isolated barred spiral galaxies, where the bar's influence dominates without tidal perturbations from companions. Simulations indicate that such rings are more prevalent in galaxies with strong bars and rising or flat rotation curves, as these conditions support stable x₂ orbit families perpendicular to the bar major axis. Outer rings formed this way are rarer and typically less complete, often requiring additional dynamical support to maintain their extent, making bar-driven processes less dominant for fully isolated, expansive ring galaxies.[13][15] Evidence for bar instability as a ring formation pathway comes from high-resolution N-body simulations incorporating live dark matter halos, which reveal particle trapping at resonances like the ILR and corotation radius, resulting in ring-like distributions of stars and gas. Spectroscopic observations of barred galaxies, such as those from the Hubble Space Telescope, corroborate these models by showing enhanced star formation in resonant rings, with morphologies matching simulated gas accumulations on x₂ orbits. Unlike collision-induced rings, bar-driven examples lack offset central cores and exhibit symmetric alignments with the bar, as confirmed in parameter studies across diverse potentials.[16][13][14]

Accretion Processes

Accretion processes contribute to ring galaxy formation through the gradual inflow of external material onto a galaxy's disk, distinct from more violent interactions. In intergalactic medium accretion, diffuse, metal-poor gas from the cosmic web slowly infalls onto the disk of an isolated galaxy, cooling and collapsing preferentially at the outer edge to form a ring structure.[17] This mechanism replenishes gas reserves, enabling sustained ring development over extended periods, as seen in examples like NGC 4262, where an HI outer ring likely originated from accretion of an intergalactic HI cloud approximately 2 × 10^8 years ago.[18] Tidal accretion involves the stripping of material from a companion galaxy or dwarf satellite through gravitational forces, which then settles into a ring, often oriented perpendicular to the host disk in polar configurations.[19] This process includes disruptions of dwarf satellites, where tidal forces extract gas and stars that accumulate into ring-like features, as simulated in models of satellite infall.[19] Notable cases include NGC 4378, where a grazing encounter with a small companion produced ring structures.[18] Rings formed via accretion processes tend to be smoother and exhibit less intense starburst activity compared to those from head-on collisions, owing to the slower, more diffuse material inflow.[18] They are particularly common in isolated environments, such as Hoag's Object, where cold accretion of gas onto an elliptical core has been proposed to build the prominent outer ring over 2–3 gigayears.[20] Hydrodynamical simulations, including those from the EAGLE project, demonstrate that accretion-driven rings build up gradually over approximately 2 gigayears, often at the stellar disk's periphery, with enhanced but not explosive star formation.[21] These features occur more frequently in low-density regions, where external gas inflow faces fewer disruptions.[21] Polar ring variants, arising from such tidal accretion, further illustrate this pathway.[19]

Notable Examples

Cartwheel Galaxy

The Cartwheel Galaxy, a striking example of a collisional ring galaxy, was discovered in 1941 by Swiss astronomer Fritz Zwicky at the California Institute of Technology, who described it as one of the most complex galactic structures observed at the time.[22] Located approximately 500 million light-years away in the constellation Sculptor, it spans about 150,000 light-years in diameter and belongs to a small group of galaxies known as the Cartwheel group.[23] This lenticular galaxy features a prominent outer ring surrounding a bright inner core, with distinctive radial spokes extending inward, giving it its characteristic cartwheel appearance.[24] The galaxy's ring structure formed as the result of a head-on collision approximately 300–400 million years ago between an original spiral galaxy—similar to the Milky Way—and a smaller companion galaxy that passed through its center.[25] This "bull's-eye" impact generated a radially propagating density wave that expanded outward, compressing interstellar gas and dust to trigger widespread star formation while displacing the original disk material into the prominent ring and spokes.[26] The collision's dynamics are evident in the galaxy's morphology, where the inner region preserves remnants of the pre-collision spiral arms now visible as spokes.[27] Among its unique features, the Cartwheel Galaxy exhibits an elevated star formation rate of approximately 20 solar masses per year (literature estimates), primarily concentrated in the outer ring where young, massive stars illuminate the structure.[25] The inner core, by contrast, hosts an older stellar population with redder hues, indicative of less recent activity and a central supermassive black hole.[4] The ring expands at a velocity of about 50–60 km/s, corresponding to an expansion rate of roughly 1.5 km/s per kiloparsec, as derived from kinematic studies.[28] Observations from the Hubble Space Telescope reveal a vivid contrast in the galaxy's colors: the outer ring appears predominantly blue due to hot, young stars and active star-forming regions, while the inner core glows red from older, cooler stars.[24] Spectroscopic data, including Hα emission lines, provide evidence of ongoing density wave propagation, with velocity fields showing the ring's outward motion and rotational dynamics consistent with the collisional origin.[29] Recent James Webb Space Telescope imaging further highlights intricate details of star clusters and dust lanes within the ring, underscoring the galaxy's dynamic evolution.[4]

Hoag's Object

Hoag's Object is a rare and enigmatic ring galaxy discovered in 1950 by astronomer Arthur Hoag while examining photographic plates from the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey.[30] Located approximately 600 million light-years away in the constellation Serpens, it spans about 100,000 light-years across, with the ring structure having an optical diameter of roughly 47 kiloparsecs.[31][32] The galaxy features a bright yellow core composed of older stars, estimated to be over 10 billion years old, surrounded by a prominent blue ring of younger, middle-aged stars around 1 billion years old, with a nearly empty gap between them containing minimal gas and dust.[32] Unlike typical collisional ring galaxies, Hoag's Object exhibits low star formation rates, approximately 0.7 solar masses per year, and limited neutral hydrogen gas concentrated in an extended ring with a total mass of about 6.2 × 10⁹ solar masses.[32] The structure of Hoag's Object includes a central triaxial elliptical core that follows a de Vaucouleurs profile and rotates rapidly, encircled by the stellar ring embedded in a larger, mildly warped neutral hydrogen envelope extending to about 71 kiloparsecs.[32] This configuration results in a highly symmetric appearance, with the blue ring highlighting recent star formation and the yellow core representing an ancient stellar population, distinguishing it from more asymmetric ring systems.[33] Debates on its formation favor an accretion scenario from the intergalactic medium over a galactic collision, due to the object's pristine symmetry, lack of dynamical distortions, and absence of evidence for recent interactions within the past 1–2 billion years.[32][33] Radio observations indicate regular kinematics in the gas distribution, supporting a slow buildup of material rather than a violent merger event.[32] Post-2000 observations with the Hubble Space Telescope have resolved the core-ring contrast in high detail, revealing subtle dark dust lanes spiraling inward from the ring and hints of an inner arc-like feature, while confirming the low gas content in the inter-ring region. Age estimates from stellar population modeling place the core at over 10 billion years and the ring at around 1 billion years, consistent with an early accretion episode billions of years ago.[32] Infrared studies, including those from the Spitzer Space Telescope on similar ring systems, suggest minimal ongoing dust-obscured star formation in Hoag's Object, reinforcing its quiescent nature.

Evolutionary and Observational Aspects

Transient Nature and Evolution

Ring galaxies exhibit a transient nature, with their characteristic ring structures persisting for only 100-500 million years before dissipating.[10] This limited lifespan arises primarily from the dynamics of density waves and gas instabilities triggered by interactions, making rings a fleeting phase in galactic evolution.[10] Post-formation, ring structures undergo radial expansion as density waves propagate outward, often at speeds influenced by the galaxy's rotation curve.[10] Over time, the rings fragment into clumps due to gravitational instabilities when self-gravity overcomes pressure and shear forces, typically within 200-250 million years depending on gas fraction.[34] Star formation, initially vigorous in the compressed ring material, quenches as gas depletes through consumption and dispersion, leading to fading emission in the ring.[10] Eventually, the ring dissolves, with material spreading into spiral arms or integrating with the galactic core, transforming the system into a more typical spiral galaxy; in cases of significant dynamical heating, evolution toward elliptical morphologies is possible through further interactions.[34][10] The longevity of ring features depends on factors such as the initial collision velocity, which determines expansion rates and stability, or accretion rates in non-collisional cases, where sustained gas inflow can prolong the structure.[10][35] Numerical simulations, including N-body and hydrodynamical models, predict dissolution through viscous spreading and phase mixing, where interstellar medium interactions broaden and dilute the ring over hundreds of millions of years.[10] For instance, the Cartwheel Galaxy demonstrates ongoing expansion consistent with these models, approximately 300 million years post-interaction.[10] These transient rings serve as evolutionary snapshots, capturing the immediate aftermath of interactions and revealing insights into galactic disk responses, gas dynamics, and star formation regulation.[10]

Observational Detection and Studies

Ring galaxies are detected primarily through large-scale optical imaging surveys, such as the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), where automated algorithms employing convolutional neural networks analyze galaxy images to identify ring-like structures.[36] One such application to SDSS data produced a catalog of 4855 ring galaxy candidates, highlighting the efficiency of deep learning in expanding known samples beyond the earlier manual identifications of around 200 classical examples.[37] These optical methods excel at revealing the stellar components of rings but often require supplementary data to distinguish genuine structures from artifacts. Infrared observations provide critical insights into dust distributions and obscured features within ring galaxies. The Spitzer Space Telescope has mapped mid-infrared emission from dust in collisional ring systems, revealing star formation concentrated along ring perimeters.[10] More recently, James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) near-infrared imaging in the 2020s has detected structural ring galaxies in distant systems, such as the large-scale clumpy ring galaxy zC406690 at redshift z = 2.2, which exhibits ordered rotation and persists across UV to near-infrared wavelengths.[38] Radio interferometry with the Very Large Array (VLA) complements these by tracing neutral and ionized gas dynamics, with observations showing expanding ring velocities that align with theoretical models of ring propagation.[39] Statistical analyses from surveys like SDSS and the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) Legacy Imaging indicate that classical ring galaxies comprise approximately 0.2–1% of the overall galaxy population, underscoring their rarity compared to spirals or ellipticals.[21] Key studies have validated formation simulations through kinematic mapping of velocity fields, where observed gas rotation curves in ring galaxies match hydrodynamic predictions of density wave propagation following collisions.[21] These empirical findings integrate with galaxy evolution models, demonstrating how rings serve as transient phases in merger-driven morphological transformations. A major challenge in detection is distinguishing true ring galaxies from gravitational lensing events, which can produce arc-like or annular distortions mimicking rings, as well as from edge-on projections of ordinary disk galaxies.[40] Multi-wavelength datasets are essential for confirmation, combining optical morphology with infrared dust tracing and radio kinematics to rule out lenses and projections.[10] Advances in machine learning, such as two-stage Swin Transformer models applied to DESI surveys, have enhanced catalog reliability, achieving over 64% precision in classifying rings and discovering thousands of new candidates while linking observations to evolutionary simulations.[41]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.