Bulges and disks in the local Universe. Linking the galaxy structure to star formation activity
L. Morselli, P. Popesso, G. Erfanianfar, A. Concas

TL;DR
This study analyzes how bulge and disk components influence galaxy star formation activity in the local universe, revealing that star formation suppression occurs first in the bulge before affecting the disk, shaping galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It links galaxy structure to star formation activity using SDSS data and bulge-disc decomposition, providing new insights into the morphological quenching process.
Findings
Galaxies on the main sequence have low B/T ratios.
Bulges above the MS are actively star-forming or dust-obscured.
Galaxy quenching proceeds from bulge to disk.
Abstract
We use a sample built on the SDSS DR7 catalogue and the bulge-disc decomposition of Simard et al. (2011) to study how the bulge and disc components contribute to the parent galaxy's star formation activity, by determining its position in the star formation rate (SFR) - stellar mass (M) plane at 0.020.1. We use the bulge and disc colours as proxy for their SFRs. We study the mean galaxy bulge-total mass ratio (B/T) as a function of the residual from the MS () and find that the B/T- relation exhibits a parabola-like shape with the peak of the MS corresponding to the lowest B/Ts at any stellar mass. The lower and upper envelop of the MS are populated by galaxies with similar B/T, velocity dispersion and concentration () values. Bulges above the MS are characterised by blue colours or, when red, by a high level of dust obscuration,…
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