On the baryonic, stellar, and luminous scaling relations of disk galaxies
V. Avila-Reese (1), J. Zavala (2), C. Firmani (3, 1), H. M., Hern\'andez-Toledo (1) ((1) IA-UNAM, (2) ICN-UNAM, Shanghai AO, (3), INAF-OAB)

TL;DR
This study analyzes how the scaling relations of disk galaxies vary across different wavelengths and quantities, revealing evolution effects and the influence of gas infall, star formation, and galaxy properties, with implications for galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the changes in scaling relations from B to K bands and stellar to baryonic quantities, highlighting the role of gas surface density and residual correlations.
Findings
The baryonic Tully-Fisher relation includes the scale length Rb as a third parameter.
The B-band TFR exhibits the most scatter, with color acting as a third parameter.
LSB galaxies deviate from trends, indicating a threshold in gas surface density affecting star formation.
Abstract
We explore how the slopes and scatters of the scaling relations of disk galaxies (Vm-L[-M], R-L[-M], and Vm-R) do change when moving from B to K bands and to stellar and baryonic quantities. For our compiled sample of 76 normal, non-interacting high and low surface brightness galaxies, we find some changes, which evidence evolution effects, mainly related to gas infall and star formation (SF). We also explore correlations among the (B-K) color, stellar mass fraction fs, mass M (luminosity L), and surface density (SB), as well as correlations among the residuals of the scaling relations. Some of our findings are: (i) the scale length Rb is a third parameter in the baryonic TF relation and the residuals of this relation follow a trend (slope ~-0.15) with the residuals of the Rb-Mb relation; for the stellar and K band cases, R is not anymore a third parameter and the mentioned trend…
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