Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): The unimodal nature of the dwarf galaxy population
Smriti Mahajan, Michael J. Drinkwater, S. Driver, Lee S. Kelvin, A. M., Hopkins, I. Baldry, S. Phillipps, J. Bland-Hawthorn, S. Brough, J. Loveday,, Samantha J. Penny, A.S.G. Robotham

TL;DR
This study finds that visually distinct star-forming dwarf galaxies form a single, unified population based on their physical and star formation properties, challenging traditional classification schemes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that dwarf galaxy subclasses are not physically distinct but are part of a unimodal distribution in key galaxy parameters.
Findings
Star-forming dwarf galaxies are part of a unimodal population.
Passive dwarf ellipticals are statistically distinct from star-forming dwarfs.
Giant galaxy classes are clearly segregated by star formation activity.
Abstract
In this paper we aim to (i) test the number of statistically distinct classes required to classify the local galaxy population, and, (ii) identify the differences in the physical and star formation properties of visually-distinct galaxies. To accomplish this, we analyse the structural parameters (effective radius r_e, effective surface brightness within r_e (mu_e), central surface brightness (mu_0), and S'ersic index (n)), obtained by fitting the light profile of 432 galaxies (0.002<z<=0.02 Viking Z-band), and their spectral energy distribution using multi-band photometry in 18 broadbands to obtain the stellar mass (M*), the star formation rate (SFR), the specific SFR (sSFR) and the dust mass (M_{dust}), respectively. We show that visually distinct, star-forming dwarf galaxies (irregulars, blue spheroids and low surface brightness galaxies) form a unimodal population in a parameter…
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