The Lopsidedness of Present-Day Galaxies: Results from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Timothy A. Reichard, Timothy M. Heckman, Gregory Rudnick, Jarle, Brinchmann, Guinevere Kauffmann

TL;DR
This study quantifies large-scale asymmetries in over 25,000 galaxies from SDSS, revealing that lopsidedness correlates with structural parameters and is primarily due to stellar mass distribution asymmetries, shedding light on galaxy evolution processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of galaxy lopsidedness using Fourier modes across a large sample, highlighting its dependence on structural properties and dark matter influences.
Findings
Lopsidedness correlates with low concentration, mass, and surface density.
Outer galaxy regions and low-density galaxies are more lopsided.
Lopsidedness increases with radius and is linked to dark matter halo asymmetries.
Abstract
Large-scale asymmetries in the stellar mass distribution in galaxies are believed to trace non-equilibrium situations in the luminous and/or dark matter component. These may arise in the aftermath of events like mergers, accretion, and tidal interactions. These events are key in the evolution of galaxies. In this paper we quantify the large-scale lopsidedness of light distributions in 25155 galaxies at z < 0.06 from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 4 using the m = 1 azimuthal Fourier mode. We show that the lopsided distribution of light is primarily due to a corresponding lopsidedness in the stellar mass distribution. Observational effects, such as seeing, Poisson noise, and inclination, introduce only small errors in lopsidedness for the majority of this sample. We find that lopsidedness correlates strongly with other basic galaxy structural parameters: galaxies with low…
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