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Found: High Surface Brightness Compact Galaxies

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 Added by Michael Drinkwater
 Publication date 1998
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We are using the 2dF spectrograph to make a survey of all objects (`stars and `galaxies) in a 12 sq.deg region towards the Fornax cluster. We have discovered a population of compact emission-line galaxies unresolved on photographic sky survey plates and therefore missing in most galaxy surveys based on such material. These galaxies are as luminous as normal field galaxies. Using H-alpha to estimate star formation they contribute at least an additional 5 per cent to the local star formation rate.



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58 - I. Plauchu-Frayn , 2006
Images of 7 Compact groups of galaxies (CG) were obtained using the 2.1m telescope in San Pedro Martir (B.C. Mexico) equipped with the NIR camera CAMILA. The NIR images trace the mass of the galaxies, through the oldest and more evolved stellar populations. The goal of this project is to search for evidence of morphological perturbations correlated with the level of activity (AGN or star formation) of the galaxies. We find that the level of perturbation is well correlated with activity observed in optical spectrocopy (Coziol et al. 2004). Evidence for perturbations decreases from more active groups to less active groups, confirming the classification. Our analysis suggests that galaxies in more active groups are undergoing important transformations due to interaction and merging and that the whole groups is on a merger path. Galaxies in less active CG have gone through similar processes in the recent past and are either in a final merging phase or in equilibrium due to a more massive halo of dark matter.
We have placed limits on the cosmological significance of gas-rich low surface-brightness (LSB) galaxies as a proportion of the total population of gas-rich galaxies by carrying out a very deep survey (HIDEEP) for neutral hydrogen (HI) with the Parkes multibeam system. Such a survey avoids the surface-brightness selection effects that limit the usefulness of optical surveys for finding LSB galaxies. To complement the HIDEEP survey we have digitally stacked eight 1-hour R-band Tech Pan films from the UK Schmidt Telescope covering 36 square degrees of the survey area to reach a very deep isophotal limit of 26.5 R mag/sq. arcsec. At this level, we find that all of the 129 HI sources within this area have optical counterparts and that 107 of them can be identified with individual galaxies. We have used the properties of the galaxies identified as the optical counterparts of the HI sources to estimate the significance of LSB galaxies (defined to be those at least 1.5 magnitudes dimmer in effective surface-brightness than the peak in the observed distribution seen in optical surveys). We calculate the contribution of LSB galaxies to the total number, neutral hydrogen density, luminosity density, baryonic mass density, dynamical mass density and cross-sectional area of gas-rich galaxies. We do not find any `Crouching Giant LSB galaxies such as Malin 1, nor do we find a population of extremely low surface-brightness galaxies not previously found by optical surveys. Such objects must either be rare, gas-poor or outside the survey detection limits.
We study the impact of deviations from the Kennicutt-Schmidt relation (quantified by the `burstiness parameter $kappa_s$), gas metallicity ($Z$), and density ($n$) on the observed [OIII]88$mu$m/[CII]158$mu$m surface brightness ratios ($Sigma_{[OIII]}/Sigma_{[CII]}$) in nine galaxies at $zapprox6-9$. We first discuss possible biases in the measured $Sigma_{[OIII]}/Sigma_{[CII]}$ ratios by comparing the data with zoom-in cosmological simulations, and then use a Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithm to derive the best fit values of ($kappa_s, Z, n$). We find that (i) the strongest dependence of $Sigma_{[OIII]}/Sigma_{[CII]}$ is on $kappa_s$; (ii) high ratios identify starburst galaxies with short gas depletion times ($t_{dep}=6-49,rm Myr$); (iii) a secondary dependence on density is found, with $Sigma_{[OIII]}/Sigma_{[CII]}$ anticorrelating with $n$ as a result of the lower [OIII] critical density, (iv) the ratio only weakly depends on $Z$. The nine galaxies are significantly enriched (Z=0.2-0.5 $Z_odot$), and dense ($n=10^{1-3} {rm cm}^{-3}$). This lends further support to the starburst scenario in which a rapid enrichment of the interstellar medium is expected.
59 - Z. Shao 2002
This paper considers some simple surface brightness (SB) estimates for galaxies in the Automated Plate Measuring Machine (APM) catalogue in order to derive homogeneous SB data for a very large sample of faint galaxies. The isophotal magnitude and area are used to estimate the central surface brightness and total magnitude based on the assumption of an exponential SB profile. The surface brightness measurements are corrected for field effects on each UK Schmidt plate and the zero-point of each plate is adjusted to give a uniform sample of SB and total magnitude estimates over the whole survey. Results are obtained for 2.4 million galaxies with blue photographic magnitudes brighter than b_J = 20.5 covering 4300 deg^2 in the region of the south galactic cap. Almost all galaxies in our sample have central surface brightness in the range 20 to 24 b_J mag per arcsec^2. The SB measurements we obtain are compared to previous SB measurements and we find an acceptable level of error of +/- 0.2 b_J mag per arcsec^2. The distribution of SB profiles is considered for different galaxy morphologies for the bright APM galaxies. We find that early-type galaxies have more centrally concentrated profiles.
77 - A. Pizzella 2004
We investigate the relation between the asymptotic circular velocity, V_c, and the central stellar velocity dispersion, sigma_c, in galaxies. We consider a new sample of high surface brightness spiral galaxies (HSB), low surface brightness spiral galaxies (LSB), and elliptical galaxies with HI-based V_c measurements. We find that: 1) elliptical galaxies with HI measurements fit well within the relation; 2) a linear law can reproduce the data as well as a power law (used in previous works) even for galaxies with sigma_c < 70 km/s; 3) LSB galaxies, considered for the first time with this respect, seem to behave differently, showing either larger V_c values or smaller sigma_c values.
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