Revisiting the structure of galactic disks with deep imaging
/ Authors
/ Abstract
Thanks to new advances in astronomical imaging, we can now routinely explore disk galaxy profiles about two magnitudes deeper than the data available 20 years ago. In this regard, it is an opportune time to reevaluate the past classifications of different surface brightness types. In this paper we explore the stellar mass profiles of a sample of disk galaxies with similar stellar masses (∼10^10 M_⊙) using IAC Stripe82 Legacy Project data. We find that Type I, II-CT, and III-d galaxies exhibit edges at surface brightnesses, μ_g(R_edge), of ∼26.5 mag/arcsec^2 and surface mass densities, Σ(R_edge), of ∼0.5-1 M_⊙/pc^2. These surface brightnesses had been outside the range of typical SDSS images and, therefore, unstudied until now. The present data suggest (although the statistics are inconclusive) that the main difference between the previous profile types is the presence of either a more or a less intense bulge. Half of the Type II-CT galaxies are Sc, whereas half of the Type III-d galaxies are Sb. Finally, Type III-d galaxies have low surface mass density disks (Σ(Δ R_ exp ) of ∼0.5 M_⊙/pc^2) and are bluer -- $(g-r)_0$=0.32±0.02 -- than the other types ($(g-r)_0$=0.42±0.02 for Types I and II-CT), suggesting that their disks probably formed later in time.
Journal: Astronomy & Astrophysics