Low Surface Brightness Galaxies in the SDSS: the link between environment, star-forming properties and AGN
Gaspar Galaz (PUC), Rodrigo Herrera-Camus (PUC, U. of Maryland),, Diego Garcia-Lambas (Cordoba), and Nelson Padilla (PUC)

TL;DR
This study uses SDSS data to explore how environment and galaxy interactions influence star formation and AGN activity in low and high surface brightness galaxies, revealing that LSBGs are more isolated, have lower AGN fractions, and are less affected by interactions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental dependence of star formation and AGN presence in LSBGs compared to HSBGs, emphasizing their different evolutionary paths.
Findings
LSBGs are more isolated than HSBGs at small scales.
Star formation activity in LSBGs increases with close interactions.
LSBGs hosting AGN are less common than HSBGs with AGN.
Abstract
Using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data release 4 (DR 4), we investigate the spatial distribution of low and high surface brightness galaxies (LSBGs and HSBGs, respectively). In particular, we focus our attention on the influence of interactions between galaxies on the star formation strength in the redshift range . With cylinder counts and projected distance to the first and fifth-nearest neighbor as environment tracers, we find that LSBGs tend to have a lack of companions compared to HSBGs at small scales ( Mpc). Regarding the interactions, we have evidence that the fraction of LSBGs with strong star formation activity increases when the distance between pairs of galaxies () is smaller than about four times the Petrosian radius () of one of the components. Our results suggest that, rather than being a condition for their formation, the…
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