The AMIGA sample of isolated galaxies. IV. A catalogue of neighbours around isolated galaxies
S. Verley, S. C. Odewahn, L. Verdes-Montenegro, S. Leon, F. Combes, J., Sulentic, G. Bergond, D. Espada, E. Garcia, U. Lisenfeld, and J. Sabater

TL;DR
This paper refines the isolation criteria for galaxies in the AMIGA sample by cataloguing potential neighbours around 950 galaxies, providing a more quantitative measure of their isolation status for studies on environmental effects.
Contribution
It presents a detailed catalogue of potential neighbours around isolated galaxies, improving the quantification of galaxy isolation in the local universe.
Findings
Most neighbours are background galaxies, not physically associated.
Original isolation criteria were conservative, excluding neighbours within a large velocity range.
Galaxies show varying degrees of isolation, necessitating a quantitative measure.
Abstract
Studies of the effects of environment on galaxy properties and evolution require well defined control samples. Such isolated galaxy samples have up to now been small or poorly defined. The AMIGA project (Analysis of the interstellar Medium of Isolated GAlaxies) represents an attempt to define a statistically useful sample of the most isolated galaxies in the local (z < 0.05) Universe. A suitable large sample for the AMIGA project already exists, the Catalogue of Isolated Galaxies (CIG, Karachentseva 1973; 1050 galaxies), and we use this sample as a starting point to refine and perform a better quantification of its isolation properties. Digitised POSS-I E images were analysed out to a minimum projected radius R > 0.5 Mpc around 950 CIG galaxies (those within Vr = 1500 km s-1 were excluded). We identified all galaxy candidates in each field brighter than B = 17.5 with a high degree of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsHermeneutics and Narrative Identity · Aging, Elder Care, and Social Issues · Health, Medicine and Society
