Probing the Rotation Curve of NGC 4501 Galaxy using Two Different Models
Main Article Content
Abstract
Rotation curves of spiral galaxies have become an important tool for investigating their physical properties and is usually used as evidence for dark matter presence in their haloes. This research aims to probe the rotation curve of the spiral galaxy NGC 4501. The HI data of this galaxy have been collected from Very Large Array (VLA) and nonlinear fitting techniques have been used in this research for different components: stars, gas and halo. Particularly, kinematic analysis of NGC 4501’s rotation curve has been carried out in this research using two different profile models: pseudo-isothermal profile and the Moore profile. The results of this study clearly showed that pseudo-isothermal model is better at reproducing the rotation curve of NGC 4501 than Moore model. The reduced chi-square, χ_"red " ^2 of pseudo-isothermal is found to be close to one whereas Moore model does not agree with observational data. This is due to the fact that the pseudo-isothermal model is characterized primarily by the linearity of its behavior within the inner region together with the flat profile at large radii. As a result, the dark matter distribution in NGC 4501 is one that may be represented by a core halo model.
Downloads
Article Details

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Transfer of Copyrights
- In the event of publication of the manuscript entitled [INSERT MANUSCRIPT TITLE AND REF NO.] in the Malaysian Journal of Science, I hereby transfer copyrights of the manuscript title, abstract and contents to the Malaysian Journal of Science and the Faculty of Science, University of Malaya (as the publisher) for the full legal term of copyright and any renewals thereof throughout the world in any format, and any media for communication.
Conditions of Publication
- I hereby state that this manuscript to be published is an original work, unpublished in any form prior and I have obtained the necessary permission for the reproduction (or am the owner) of any images, illustrations, tables, charts, figures, maps, photographs and other visual materials of whom the copyrights is owned by a third party.
- This manuscript contains no statements that are contradictory to the relevant local and international laws or that infringes on the rights of others.
- I agree to indemnify the Malaysian Journal of Science and the Faculty of Science, University of Malaya (as the publisher) in the event of any claims that arise in regards to the above conditions and assume full liability on the published manuscript.
Reviewer’s Responsibilities
- Reviewers must treat the manuscripts received for reviewing process as confidential. It must not be shown or discussed with others without the authorization from the editor of MJS.
- Reviewers assigned must not have conflicts of interest with respect to the original work, the authors of the article or the research funding.
- Reviewers should judge or evaluate the manuscripts objective as possible. The feedback from the reviewers should be express clearly with supporting arguments.
- If the assigned reviewer considers themselves not able to complete the review of the manuscript, they must communicate with the editor, so that the manuscript could be sent to another suitable reviewer.
Copyright: Rights of the Author(s)
- Effective 2007, it will become the policy of the Malaysian Journal of Science (published by the Faculty of Science, University of Malaya) to obtain copyrights of all manuscripts published. This is to facilitate:
- Protection against copyright infringement of the manuscript through copyright breaches or piracy.
- Timely handling of reproduction requests from authorized third parties that are addressed directly to the Faculty of Science, University of Malaya.
- As the author, you may publish the fore-mentioned manuscript, whole or any part thereof, provided acknowledgement regarding copyright notice and reference to first publication in the Malaysian Journal of Science and Faculty of Science, University of Malaya (as the publishers) are given. You may produce copies of your manuscript, whole or any part thereof, for teaching purposes or to be provided, on individual basis, to fellow researchers.
- You may include the fore-mentioned manuscript, whole or any part thereof, electronically on a secure network at your affiliated institution, provided acknowledgement regarding copyright notice and reference to first publication in the Malaysian Journal of Science and Faculty of Science, University of Malaya (as the publishers) are given.
- You may include the fore-mentioned manuscript, whole or any part thereof, on the World Wide Web, provided acknowledgement regarding copyright notice and reference to first publication in the Malaysian Journal of Science and Faculty of Science, University of Malaya (as the publishers) are given.
- In the event that your manuscript, whole or any part thereof, has been requested to be reproduced, for any purpose or in any form approved by the Malaysian Journal of Science and Faculty of Science, University of Malaya (as the publishers), you will be informed. It is requested that any changes to your contact details (especially e-mail addresses) are made known.
Copyright: Role and responsibility of the Author(s)
- In the event of the manuscript to be published in the Malaysian Journal of Science contains materials copyrighted to others prior, it is the responsibility of current author(s) to obtain written permission from the copyright owner or owners.
- This written permission should be submitted with the proof-copy of the manuscript to be published in the Malaysian Journal of Science
Licensing Policy
Malaysian Journal of Science is an open-access journal that follows the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-commercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0)
CC BY – NC 4.0: Under this licence, the reusers to distribute, remix, alter, and build upon the content in any media or format for non-commercial purposes only, as long as proper acknowledgement is given to the authors of the original work. Please take the time to read the whole licence agreement (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/legalcode ).
References
Ade, P. A., Aghanim, N., Arnaud, M., Ashdown, M., Aumont, J., Baccigalupi, C., ... & Matarrese, S. (2016). Planck 2015 results-xiii. cosmological parameters. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 594, A13.
Ali, I. A. M. (2021). Testing Two Halo Models by Galactic Rotation Curve. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 1818, No. 1, p. 012197). IOP Publishing.
Ali, I. A. M., Hashim, N., & Abidin, Z. Z. (2018). The dark matter distribution of NGC 5921. Indian Journal of Physics 92(4): 409-415.
Babcock, H. W. (1939). The rotation of the Andromeda Nebula. Lick observatory bulletin, 19, 41-51.
Bertone, G., Hooper, D., & Silk, J. (2005). Particle dark matter: Evidence, candidates and constraints. Physics reports 405(5-6): 279-390.
Bevington, P. R., & Robinson, D. K. (1969). Data reduction and error analysis for the physical sciences. New York, 19692, 235.
Binggeli, B., Sandage, A., & Tammann, G. A. (1985). Studies of the Virgo Cluster. II-A catalog of 2096 galaxies in the Virgo Cluster area. The Astronomical Journal 90: 1681-1759.
Bosma, A. (1981). 21-cm line studies of spiral galaxies. II. The distribution and kinematics of neutral hydrogen in spiral galaxies of various morphological types. The Astronomical Journal 86: 1825-1846.
Chung, A., Van Gorkom, J. H., Kenney, J. D., Crowl, H., & Vollmer, B. (2009). VLA imaging of virgo spirals in atomic gas (VIVA). I. The atlas and the H i properties. The Astronomical Journal 138(6): 1741.
de Blok, E., McGaugh, S., & Rubin, V. (2001). High-resolution rotation curves of LSB galaxies: Mass Models. arXiv preprint astro-ph/0107366.
de Swart, J., Bertone, G., & van Dongen, J. How dark matter came to matter. Nature Astron. 1, 0059 (2017). arXiv preprint arXiv:1703.00013.
Freeman, K. C. (1970). On the disks of spiral and S0 galaxies. The Astrophysical Journal 160: 811.
Frusciante, N., Salucci, P., Vernieri, D., Cannon, J.M. & Elson, E.C. (2012). The distribution of mass in the Orion dwarf galaxy. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 426(1): 751-757.
Guhathakurta, P., Van Gorkom, J. H., Kotanyi, C. G., & Balkowski, C. (1988). A VLA HI survey of the Virgo cluster spirals. II-Rotation curves. Astronomical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256), vol. 96, Sept. 1988, p. 851-866., 96, 851-866.
Hashim, N., Abidin, Z. Z., Ibrahim, U. F. S. U., Hassan, M. S. R., Hamidi, Z. S., Umar, R., & Ibrahim, Z. A. (2015). The nonlinear least square fitting for rotation curve of Orion dwarf spiral. Sains Malaysiana, 44(3), 457-462.
Jimenez, R., Verde, L., & Oh, S. P. (2003). Dark halo properties from rotation curves. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 339(1): 243-259.
Kahn, F. D., & Woltjer, L. (1959). Intergalactic Matter and the Galaxy. The Astrophysical Journal 130: 705.
Klypin, A., Kravtsov, A. V., Valenzuela, O., & Prada, F. (1999). Where are the missing galactic satellites?. The Astrophysical Journal, 522(1), 82.
Mannheim, P. D. (2006). Alternatives to dark matter and dark energy. Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics 56(2): 340-445.
Moffat, J. W., & Rahvar, S. (2013). The MOG weak field approximation and observational test of galaxy rotation curves. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 436(2): 1439-1451.
Möllenhoff, C., & Heidt, J. (2001). Surface photometry of spiral galaxies in NIR: structural parameters of disks and bulges. Astronomy & Astrophysics 368(1): 16-37.
Moore, B., Quinn, T., Governato, F., Stadel, J., & Lake, G. (1999). Cold collapse and the core catastrophe. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 310(4): 1147-1152.
Nehlig, F., Vollmer, B., & Braine, J. (2016). Effects of environmental gas compression on the multiphase ISM and star formation-The Virgo spiral galaxies NGC 4501 and NGC 4567/68. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 587, A108.
Onodera, S., Sofue, Y., Koda, J., Nakanishi, H., & Kohno, K. (2002). CO (J= 1-0) Observations of the Non-Barred Seyfert 2 Galaxy NGC 4501. In 8th Asian-Pacific Regional Meeting, Volume II (pp. 199-200).
Oort, J. H. (1927). Observational evidence confirming Lindblad's hypothesis of a rotation of the galactic system. Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of the Netherlands 3: 275.
Sofue, Y., & Rubin, V. (2001). Rotation curves of spiral galaxies. Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics 39(1): 137-174.
Sofue, Y., Koda, J., Nakanishi, H., & Onodera, S. (2003). The virgo high-resolution CO survey: II. Rotation curves and dynamical mass distributions. Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan, 55(1), 59-74.
Sofue, Y. (2013). The mass distribution and rotation curve in the galaxy. arXiv preprint arXiv:1307.8215.
Spergel, D. N., Bean, R., Doré, O., Nolta, M. R., Bennett, C. L., Dunkley, J., ... & Wright, E. L. (2007). Three-year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) observations: implications for cosmology. The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series 170(2): 377.
Tan, W. S., Abidin, Z. Z., & Hashim, N. (2022). A comprehensive analysis using 9 dark matter halo models on the spiral galaxy NGC 4321. Indian Journal of Physics 96(3): 671-687.
Teodoro, E. D., & Fraternali, F. (2015). 3D BAROLO: a new 3D algorithm to derive rotation curves of galaxies. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 451(3): 3021-3033.
Woods, D., Madore, B. F., & Fahlman, G. G. (1990). Luminosity-velocity diagrams for Virgo Cluster spirals. I-Inner rotation curves. The Astrophysical Journal, 353, 90-102.
Zwicky, F. (1933). Die rotverschiebung von extragalaktischen nebeln. Helvetica Physica Acta, Vol. 6, p. 110-127, 6, 110-127.