Properties of Galaxies in the Disc Central Surface Brightness Gap
Jenny G. Sorce, Peter Creasey, Noam I. Libeskind

TL;DR
This study examines intermediate surface brightness galaxies, revealing their unique properties, environmental preferences, and potential role as transitional objects between high and low surface brightness galaxies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of ISB galaxy characteristics, environment, and their possible transitional nature, filling a gap in understanding galaxy surface brightness diversity.
Findings
ISB galaxies have intermediate stellar, gas, and baryonic masses.
They follow the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation with higher scatter.
ISBs are more likely found in sheet environments and may serve as unstable transition states.
Abstract
Intermediate surface brightness (ISB) galaxies are less numerous than their counterparts at high and low surface brightness (HSB and LSB). Investigating ISB characteristics from a sample from the S4G survey, complete down to M_B=-16, we find that they have intermediate stellar, gas and baryonic masses and on average as much gas as stars. They lie on the (baryonic) Tully-Fisher relation between HSBs and LSBs, although they present a higher scatter than the latter. Their stellar to baryonic mass ratios have intermediate values unlike their condensed baryonic fractions. By comparing their environments, as classified by the eigenvalues of the velocity shear tensor of local constrained simulations, ISBs have a 5-10% probability higher (smaller) to be in sheets (filaments) with respect to HSBs and LSBs. Additionally, for galaxies in filaments (with close neighbors), the mass and mu_0 are…
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