Color Profiles of Spiral Galaxies: Clues on Outer-Disk Formation Scenarios
Judit Bakos (1), Ignacio Trujillo (1), Michael Pohlen (2); ((1), Insituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, (2) Cardiff University, School of, Physics, Astronomy)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the color and mass density profiles of 85 spiral galaxies, revealing that breaks in light profiles are due to stellar population changes rather than mass distribution, informing galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that stellar population variations cause light profile breaks, which are not reflected in mass profiles, providing new insights into outer-disk formation scenarios.
Findings
Breaks in light profiles are due to stellar population changes.
Mass profiles of broken exponential galaxies resemble pure exponential profiles.
Stellar mass density at the break is approximately 10-14 Msun/pc^2.
Abstract
We have explored radial color and stellar surface mass density profiles for a sample of 85 late-type spiral galaxies with deep (down to ~27 mag arcsec^-2) SDSS g'- and r'-band surface brightness profiles. About 90% of the light profiles have been classified as broken exponentials, exhibiting either truncations (Type II galaxies) or antitruncations (Type III galaxies). The color profiles of Type II galaxies show a "U shape" with a minimum of (g' - r') = 0.47 +- 0.02 mag at the break radius. Around the break radius, Type III galaxies have a plateau region with a color of (g' - r') = 0.57 +- 0.02. Using the color to calculate the stellar surface mass density profiles reveals a surprising result. The breaks, well established in the light profiles of the truncated galaxies, are almost gone, and the mass profiles resemble now those of the pure exponential (Type I) galaxies. This result…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
