The environmental dependence of the structure of outer galactic discs in STAGES spiral galaxies
David T. Maltby (1), Meghan E. Gray (1), Alfonso Arag\'on-Salamanca, (1), Christian Wolf (2), Eric F. Bell (3), Shardha Jogee (4), Boris Haeussler, (1), Fabio D. Barazza (5), Asmus Boehm (6), Knud Jahnke (7) ((1) Nottingham,, (2) Oxford, (3) UMichigan, (4) UT Austin, (5) UBasel

TL;DR
This study analyzes the outer stellar disc structures of spiral galaxies in different environments and finds no significant environmental influence on their surface brightness profiles or break features.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale comparison of outer disc profiles in field and cluster spiral galaxies, showing environment does not significantly affect outer disc structure.
Findings
No environmental dependence on outer disc scalelengths.
Outer disc break strengths are unaffected by environment.
Small-radius galaxies lack outer disc truncations regardless of environment.
Abstract
We present an analysis of V-band radial surface brightness profiles for spiral galaxies from the field and cluster environments using Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys imaging and data from the Space Telescope A901/2 Galaxy Evolution Survey (STAGES). We use a large sample of ~330 face-on to intermediately inclined spiral galaxies and assess the effect of the galaxy environment on the azimuthally averaged radial surface brightness mu profiles for each galaxy in the outer stellar disc (24 < mu < 26.5 mag per sq arcsec). For galaxies with a purely exponential outer disc (~50 per cent), we determine the significance of an environmental dependence on the outer disc scalelength h_out. For galaxies with a broken exponential in their outer disc, either down-bending (truncation, ~10 per cent) or up-bending (anti-truncation, ~40 per cent), we measure the strength T…
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