The red halos of SDSS low surface brightness disk galaxies
Nils Bergvall, Erik Zackrisson, Brady Caldwell

TL;DR
This study investigates the extremely red stellar halos of low surface brightness disk galaxies using stacked SDSS images, revealing a consistent red excess incompatible with normal stellar populations and exploring potential explanations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed statistical analysis of faint galaxy halos showing a persistent red excess, and discusses possible physical origins for this anomaly.
Findings
Red halo colours are incompatible with normal stellar populations.
The red excess is not due to sky subtraction residuals.
Dust extinction and bottom-heavy stellar populations are plausible explanations.
Abstract
The faint stellar halos of galaxies contain key information about the oldest stars and the process of galaxy formation. A previous study of stacked SDSS images of disk galaxies has revealed a halo with an abnormally red r-i colour, seemingly inconsistent with our current understanding of stellar halos. Here, we investigate the statistical properties of the faint envelopes of low surface brightness disk galaxies to look for further support for a red excess. 1510 edge-on low surface brightness galaxies were selected from the SDSS Data Release 5, rescaled to the same apparent size, aligned and stacked. This procedure allows us to reach a surface brightness of mu_g ~ 31 mag arcsec^-2. After a careful assessment of instrumental light scattering effects, we derive median and average radial surface brightness and colour profiles in g,r and i. The sample is then divided into 3 subsamples…
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