Colour gradients within SDSS DR7 galaxies: hints of recent evolution
V. Gonzalez-Perez, F. J. Castander, G. Kauffmann

TL;DR
This study analyzes internal colour gradients in SDSS DR7 galaxies, revealing correlations with galaxy type, star formation, and interactions, suggesting gradients as indicators of recent evolutionary activity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of colour gradients across a large galaxy sample, linking gradients to recent star formation and interactions, which was not extensively studied before.
Findings
Redder cores are common in galaxies.
Steeper gradients are more frequent in late-type galaxies.
Interacting galaxies tend to have steeper, bluer gradients.
Abstract
The evolutionary path followed by a galaxy shapes its internal structure, and, in particular, its internal colour variation. We present a study of the internal colour variation within galaxies from the Seventh Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS DR7). We statistically study the connection between the internal colour variation and global galactic properties, looking for hints of the recent galactic evolution. Considering only galaxies with good photometry and spectral measurements, we define four luminosity-threshold samples within the redshift range 0.01<z<0.17, each containing more than 48000 galaxies. Colour gradients are calculated for these galaxies from the surface brightness measurements provided by the SDSS DR7. Possible systematic effects in their determination have been analysed. We find that, on average, galaxies have redder cores than their external parts. We…
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