Toward Equations of Galactic Structure
Dennis Zaritsky, Ann I. Zabludoff, and Anthony H. Gonzalez

TL;DR
This study reveals that all galaxy types lie on a tight two-dimensional surface in a space defined by size, brightness, and velocity, suggesting a fundamental structural relation with minimal scatter.
Contribution
The paper introduces a universal surface relation for galaxies linking size, brightness, velocity, and mass-to-light ratio, with a specific fitting function for the latter, across diverse galaxy types.
Findings
Galaxies occupy a small scatter surface in the parameter space.
The mass-to-light ratio depends primarily on velocity and brightness.
The distribution of baryonic conversion efficiency varies with galaxy velocity.
Abstract
We find that all classes of galaxies, ranging from disks to spheroids and from dwarf spheroidals to brightest cluster galaxies, lie on a two dimensional surface within the space defined by the logarithms of the half-light radius, r_e, mean surface brightness within r_e, I_e, and internal velocity, V^2 = (1/2)v_c^2 + sigma^2, where v_c is the rotational velocity and sigma is the velocity dispersion. If these quantities are expressed in terms of kpc, L_solar/pc^2, and km/s, then log r_e - log V^2 + log I_e + log Upsilon_e + 0.8 = 0, where we provide a fitting function for Upsilon_e, the mass-to-light ratio within r_e in units of M_solar/L_solar, that depends only on V and I_e. The scatter about this surface for our heterogeneous sample of 1925 galaxies is small (< 0.1 dex) and could be as low as ~ 0.05 dex, or 10%. This small scatter has three possible implications for how gross galactic…
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