949 research outputs found
Structural Characteristics and Stellar Composition of Low Surface Brightness Disk Galaxies
We present UBVI surface photometry of a sample of low surface brightness
(LSB) disk galaxies. LSB disk galaxies are fairly well described as exponential
disks with no preferred value for either scale length, central surface
brightness, or rotational velocity. Indeed, the distribution of scale lengths
is indistinguishable from that of high surface brightness spirals, indicating
that dynamically similar galaxies (e.g., those with comparable Rv^2) exist over
a large range in surface density.
These LSB galaxies are strikingly blue. The complete lack of correlation
between central surface brightness and color rules out any fading scenario.
Similarly, the oxygen abundances inferred from HII region spectra are
uncorrelated with color so the low metallicities are not the primary cause of
the blue colors. While these are difficult to interpret in the absence of
significant star formation, the most plausible scenario is a stellar population
with a young mean age stemming from late formation and subsequent slow
evolution.
These properties suggest that LSB disks formed from low initial overdensities
with correspondingly late collapse times.Comment: Astronomical Journal, in press 45 pages uuencoded postscript (368K)
including 9 multipart figures also available by anonymous ftp @
ftp.ast.cam.ac.uk /pub/ssm/phot.uu CAP-30-210442962983742937
A Radial Velocity Survey for LMC Microlensed Sources
We propose a radial velocity survey with the aim to resolve the current
dispute on the LMC lensing: in the pro-macho hypothesis the lenses are halo
white dwarfs or machos in general; in the pro-star hypothesis both the lenses
and the sources are stars in various observed or hypothesized structures of the
Magellanic Clouds and the Galaxy. Star-star lensing should prefer sources at
the backside or behind the LMC disc because lensing is most efficient if the
source is located a few kpc behind a dense screen of stars, here the thin disc
of the LMC. This signature of self-lensing can be looked for by a radial
velocity survey since kinematics of the stars at the back can be markedly
different from that of the majority of stars in the cold, rapidly rotating disc
of the LMC. Detailed simulations of effect together with optimal strategies of
carrying out the proposed survey are reported here. Assuming that the existing
30 or so alerted stars in the LMC are truely microlensed stars, their
kinematics can test the two lensing scenarios; the confidence level varies with
the still very uncertain structure of the LMC. Spectroscopy of the existing
sample and future events requires about two or three good-seeing nights per
year at a 4m-8m class southern telescope, either during the amplification phase
or long after.Comment: minor changes of text, ApJ accepte
Chemical abundances in low surface brightness galaxies: Implications for their evolution
Low Surface Brightness (LSB) galaxies are an important but often neglected part of the galaxy content of the universe. Their importance stems both from the selection effects which cause them to be under-represented in galaxy catalogs, and from what they can tell us about the physical processes of galaxy evolution that has resulted in something other than the traditional Hubble sequence of spirals. An important constraint for any evolutionary model is the present day chemical abundances of LSB disks. Towards this end, spectra for a sample of 75 H 2 regions distributed in 20 LSB disks galaxies were obtained. Structurally, this sample is defined as having B(0) fainter than 23.0 mag arcsec(sup -2) and scale lengths that cluster either around 3 kpc or 10 kpc. In fact, structurally, these galaxies are very similar to the high surface brightness spirals which define the Hubble sequence. Thus, our sample galaxies are not dwarf galaxies but instead have masses comparable to or in excess of the Milky Way. The basic results from these observations are summarized
The Bright and the Dark Side of Malin 1
Malin 1 has long been considered a prototype giant, dark matter dominated Low
Surface Brightness galaxy. Two recent studies, one based on a re-analysis of
VLA HI observations and the other on an archival Hubble I-band image, throw a
new light on this enigmatic galaxy and on its dark/luminous matter properties.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of the 41st ESLAB
Symposium "The Impact of HST on European Astronomy", 29 May to 1 June 2007,
ESTEC, Noordwijk, N
The dependence of HII region properties on global and local surface brightness within galaxy discs
Using B, R, and H-alpha images of roughly equal-sized samples of low surface
brightness (LSB) and high surface brightness (HSB) galaxies (~40 galaxies
apiece), we have explored the dependence of HII region properties on local and
global disc surface brightness. We have done this by constructing co-added HII
region luminosity functions (LFs) according to local and central disc surface
brightness and fitting Schechter functions to these LFs. The results show that
the shape of the HII region LF within LSB galaxies does not change noticeably
as different limiting (i.e., mu>mu_lim) local surface brightness values are
used. However, the LFs for HSB galaxies have larger values of L_* and are less
steep at the faint-end than those of LSB galaxies for limiting B-band local
surface brightness values as faint as mu_B,lim~23-24. Both the LFs and the data
for individual HII regions show that luminous (log L>39 ergs/s) HII regions are
much more common within HSB discs than within LSB discs, implying that the
newly formed star clusters are also larger. Taking this into account along with
the results of Monte Carlo simulations, the shapes of the LFs imply that the
regions within LSB discs and those within the LSB areas of HSB discs are
relatively old (~5 Myr) while the regions within HSB discs for mu_B<24 are
significantly younger (<1 Myr). Since the majority of the LSB galaxies do not
have noticeable spiral arms and the majority of the HSB galaxies do, this may
indicate a transition within HSB discs from spiral arm-driven star formation to
a more locally driven, possibly sporadic form of star formation at mu_B~24, a
transition that does not appear to occur within LSB discs.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
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