Outer-disk reddening and gas-phase metallicities: The CALIFA connection
R. A. Marino, A. Gil de Paz, S. F. S\'anchez, P. S\'anchez-Blazquez,, N. Cardiel, A. Castillo-Morales, S. Pascual, J. V\'ilchez, C. Kehrig, M., Moll\'a, J. Mendez-Abreu, C. Catal\'an-Torrecilla, E. Florido, I. Perez, T., Ruiz-Lara, S. Ellis, A. R. L\'opez-S\'anchez

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between outer-disk metallicity gradients and surface brightness profile breaks in disk galaxies, revealing mass-dependent differences in metallicity and color gradients linked to galaxy evolution processes.
Contribution
It provides the first statistically significant analysis connecting ionized-gas metallicity gradients with surface brightness profile types in a large galaxy sample.
Findings
Low-mass Type II galaxies show metallicity flattening associated with color minima.
More massive systems exhibit uniform negative metallicity gradients.
Type III galaxies with masses ≤10^10 M_sun show weak or negative color gradients.
Abstract
We study, for the first time in a statistically significant and well-defined sample, the relation between the outer-disk ionized-gas metallicity gradients and the presence of breaks in the surface brightness profiles of disk galaxies. SDSS g'- and r'-band surface brightness, (g'- r') color, and ionized-gas oxygen abundance profiles for 324 galaxies within the CALIFA survey are used for this purpose. We perform a detailed light-profile classification finding that 84% of our disks show down- or up-bending profiles (Type II and Type III, respectively) while the remaining 16% are well fitted by one single exponential (Type I). The analysis of the color gradients at both sides of this break shows a U-shaped profile for most Type II galaxies with an average minimum (g'- r') color of ~0.5 mag and a ionized-gas metallicity flattening associated to it only in the case of low-mass galaxies. More…
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