The Unique Structural Parameters of the Underlying Host Galaxies in Blue Compact Dwarfs
Steven Janowiecki, John J. Salzer

TL;DR
This study reveals that blue compact dwarf galaxies have more concentrated and brighter underlying hosts compared to dwarf irregulars, suggesting they are a distinct, long-lived galaxy type with unique structural properties.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed structural analysis of BCDs' underlying hosts, demonstrating their distinctiveness from dwarf irregulars and proposing compactness as a key distinguishing parameter.
Findings
BCD hosts are more concentrated than dwarf irregulars.
Starburst brightness increase in BCDs is about 0.8 mag.
BCD is a long-lived, distinct dwarf galaxy type.
Abstract
The nature of possible evolutionary pathways between various types of dwarf galaxies is still not fully understood. Blue compact dwarf galaxies (BCDs) provide a unique window into dwarf galaxy formation and evolution and are often thought of as an evolutionary stage between different classes of dwarf galaxies. In this study we use deep optical and near-infrared observations of the underlying hosts of BCDs in order to study the structural differences between different types of dwarf galaxies. When compared with dwarf irregular galaxies of similar luminosities, we find that the underlying hosts of BCDs have significantly more concentrated light distributions, with smaller scale lengths and brighter central surface brightnesses. We demonstrate here that the underlying hosts of BCDs are distinct from the broad continuum of typical dwarf irregular galaxies, and that it is unlikely that most…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
