The structural properties of nearby dwarf galaxies in low density environments - size, surface brightness and colour gradients
View/ Open
Author
Lazar, Ilin
Kaviraj, Sugata
Watkins, Aaron
Martin, Garreth
Bichanga, Brian
Jackson, Ryan
Attention
2299/28250
Abstract
We use a complete sample of 211 nearby (z<0.008), dwarf (10 8 M⊙ < M ∗< 10 9.5 M⊙) galaxies in low-density environments, to study their structural properties: effective radii (R e), effective surface brightnesses (μ e), and colour gradients. We explore these properties as a function of stellar mass and the three principal dwarf morphological types identified in a companion paper - early-type galaxies (ETGs), late-type galaxies (LTGs), and featureless systems. The median R e of LTGs and featureless galaxies are factors of ∼2 and ∼1.2 larger than the ETGs. While the median (μ) e of the ETGs and LTGs is similar, the featureless class is ∼1 mag arcsec -2 fainter. Although they have similar median R e, the featureless and ETG classes differ significantly in their median (μ) e, suggesting that their evolution is different and that the featureless galaxies are not a subset of the ETGs. While massive ETGs typically exhibit negative or flat colour gradients, dwarf ETGs generally show positive colour gradients (bluer centres). The growth of ETGs therefore changes from being 'outside-in' to 'inside-out' as we move from the dwarf to the massive regime. The colour gradients of dwarf and massive LTGs are, however, similar. Around 46 per cent of dwarf ETGs show prominent, visually identifiable blue cores which extend out to ∼1.5R e. Finally, compared to their non-interacting counterparts, interacting dwarfs are larger, bluer at all radii and exhibit similar median, indicating that interactions typically enhance star formation across the entire galaxy.
Publication date
2024-10-31Published in
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical SocietyPublished version
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae1956Other links
http://hdl.handle.net/2299/28250Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
The H alpha galaxy survey. I. The galaxy sample, H alpha narrow-band observations and star formation parameters for 334 galaxies
James, P.A.; Shane, N.S.; Beckman, J.E.; Cardwell, A.; Collins, C.A.; Etherton, J.; de Jong, R.S.; Fathi, K.; Knapen, J.; Peletier, R.F.; Percival, S.M.; Pollacco, D.L.; Seigar, M.S.; Stedman, S. (2004)We discuss the selection and observations of a large sample of nearby galaxies, which we are using to quantify the star formation activity in the local Universe. The sample consists of 334 galaxies across all Hubble types ... -
On the Key Processes that Drive Galaxy Evolution: the Role of Galaxy Mergers, Accretion, Local Environment and Feedback in Shaping the Present-Day Universe
Martin, Garreth (2019-07-17)The study of galaxy evolution is a fundamental discipline in modern astrophysics, dealing with how and why galaxies of all types evolve over time. The diversity of present-day galaxies is a reflection of the processes ... -
The Physical Processes that Drive Galaxy Evolution - from Massive Galaxies to the Dwarf Regime
Jackson, Ryan (2021-09-25)The study of galaxy formation and evolution is a cornerstone in astrophysics, as galaxies connect together all scales of the Universe. The physical processes that govern galaxies therefore needs to be fully understood if ...