Title: NGC 55: a disc galaxy with flat abundance gradients Author: Laura Magrini, Denise R. Goncalves, Bruna Vajgel
We present new spectroscopic observations obtained with GMOS@Gemini-S of a sample of 25 hii regions located in NGC 55, a late-type galaxy in the nearby Sculptor group. We derive physical conditions and chemical composition through the te-method for 18 hii regions, and strong-line abundances for 22 hii regions. We provide abundances of He, O, N, Ne, S, Ar, finding a substantially homogenous composition in the ionised gas of the disc of NGC 55, with no trace of radial gradients. The oxygen abundances, both derived with \te- and strong-line methods, have similar mean values and similarly small dispersion: 12+log(O/H)=8.13±0.18~dex with the former and 12+log(O/H)=8.17±0.13~dex with the latter. The average metallicities and the flat gradients agree with previous studies of smaller samples of \hii\ regions and there is a qualitative agreement with the blue supergiant radial gradient as well. We investigate the origin of such flat gradients comparing NGC 55 with NGC 300, its companion galaxy, which is also twin of NGC 55 in terms of mass and luminosity. We suggest that the differences in the metal distributions in the two galaxies might be related to the differences in their K-band surface density profile. The flatter profile of NGC 55 probably causes in this galaxy higher infall/outflow rates than in similar galaxies. This likely provokes a strong mixing of gas and a re-distribution of metals.
NGC 55 (also Caldwell 72, ESO 293-50, MCG -7-1-13 and PGC 1014) is a magnitude +7.87 Magellanic type barred spiral galaxy located 7.2 ±0.7 million light-years away in the constellation Sculptor.
The galaxy was discovered by Scottish astronomer James Dunlop using a homemade 9-foot 22.86 cm (9 inch) f/12 speculum Newtonian reflector at Paramatta, New South Wales, Australia, on the 7th July or 4th August 1826.
Right Ascension 00h 14m 53.6s, Declination -39° 11' 48"
Along with its neighbor NGC 300, it is one of the closest galaxies to the Local Group, probably lying between us and the Sculptor Group. Read more