SCYON Abstract

Received on September 5 2003

Nuclear star formation in NGC 6240

AuthorsAnna Pasquali1, John S. Gallagher2, Richard de Grijs3
Affiliation1 ESO/ST-ECF, Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2, 85748 Garching bei München, Germany;
2 University of Wisconsin, Department of Astronomy, 475 N. Charter St., Madison, WI 53706, USA;
3 Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Sheffield, Hicks Building, Hounsfield Road, Sheffield S3 7RH, UK
Submitted toAstronomy & Astrophysics
Contactapasqual@eso.org
URLhttp://www.arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0308163
Links

Abstract

We have made use of archival HST BVIJH photometry to constrain the nature of the three discrete sources, A1, A2 and B1, identified in the double nucleus of NGC 6240. STARBURST99 models have been fitted to the observed colours, under the assumption, first, that these sources can be treated as star clusters (i.e. single, instantaneous episodes of star formation), and subsequently as star-forming regions (i.e. characterised by continuous star formation). For both scenarios, we estimate ages as young as 4 million years, integrated masses ranging between 7 x 10^6 Msun (B1) and 10^9 Msun (A1) and a rate of 1 supernova per year, which, together with the stellar winds, sustains a galactic wind of 44 Msun/yr. In the case of continuous star formation, a star-formation rate has been derived for A1 as high as 270 Msun/yr, similar to what is observed for warm Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies (ULIRGs) with a double nucleus. The A1 source is characterised by a mass density of about 1200 Msun/pc^3 which resembles the CO molecular mass density measured in cold ULIRGs and the stellar density determined in ``elliptical core'' galaxies. This, together with the recent discovery of a supermassive binary black hole in the double nucleus of NGC 6240, might indicate that the ongoing merger could shape the galaxy into a core elliptical.