The BaLROG project - II. Quantifying the influence of bars on the stellar populations of nearby galaxies
Marja K. Seidel, Jes\'us Falc\'on-Barroso, Inma Mart\'inez-Valpuesta,, Patricia S\'anchez-Bl\'azquez, Isabel P\'erez, Reynier Peletier, Alexandre, Vazdekis

TL;DR
This study investigates how bars in nearby galaxies influence stellar populations by analyzing spectral indices and gradients, revealing that bars affect metallicity and age distributions, with implications for galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of stellar population gradients along bars, demonstrating the localized impact of bars on galaxy evolution, supported by high-resolution integral field spectroscopy.
Findings
Inner gradients are steeper than outer gradients.
Bar regions tend to be older, with younger central ages in stronger bars.
Metallicity gradients flatten along the bar major axis.
Abstract
We continue the exploration of the BaLROG (Bars in Low Redshift Optical Galaxies) sample: 16 large mosaics of barred galaxies observed with the integral field unit SAURON. We quantify the influence of bars on the composition of the stellar component. We derive linestrength indices of H, Fe5015 and Mgb. Based on single stellar population (SSP) models, we calculate ages, metallicities and [Mg/Fe] abundances and their gradients along the bar major and minor axes. The high spatial resolution of our data allows us to identify breaks among index and SSP profiles, commonly at 0.130.06 bar length, consistent with kinematic features. Inner gradients are about ten times steeper than outer gradients and become larger when there is a central rotating component, implying that the gradients are not independent of dynamics and orbits. Central ages appear to be younger for stronger bars.…
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