Hubble Space Telescope ACS Imaging of the GOALS Sample: Quantitative Structural Properties of Nearby Luminous Infrared Galaxies with L_IR > 10^{11.4} L_sun
D.-C. Kim, A. S. Evans, T. Vavilkin, L. Armus, J. M. Mazzarella, K., Sheth, J. A. Surace, S. Haan, J. H. Howell, T. D\'iaz-Santos, A. Petric, K., Iwasawa, G. C. Privon, D. B. Sanders

TL;DR
This study uses HST ACS imaging to analyze the structural properties of 85 luminous infrared galaxies, revealing differences in bulge and disk components, merger stages, and bar features, contributing to understanding galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides a detailed quantitative analysis of the structural components of LIRGs and ULIRGs using GALFIT, highlighting differences in morphology and merger characteristics.
Findings
Higher fraction of bulge-less disks in LIRGs than ULIRGs
Major mergers dominate the binary systems
Bars are more common in disk+bulge systems
Abstract
A {\it Hubble Space Telescope} ({\it HST}) / Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) study of the structural properties of 85 luminous and ultraluminous ( L) infrared galaxies (LIRGs and ULIRGs) in the Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey (GOALS) sample is presented. Two-dimensional GALFIT analysis has been performed on F814W "{\it I}-band" images to decompose each galaxy, as appropriate, into bulge, disk, central PSF and stellar bar components. The fraction of bulge-less disk systems is observed to be higher in LIRGs (35%) than in ULIRGs (20%), with the disk+bulge systems making up the dominant fraction of both LIRGs (55%) and ULIRGs (45%). Further, bulge+disk systems are the dominant late-stage merger galaxy type and are the dominant type for LIRGs and ULIRGs at almost every stage of galaxy-galaxy nuclear separation. The mean {\it I}-band host absolute…
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