Blue diffuse dwarf galaxies: a clearer picture
Bethan L. James, Sergey E. Koposov, Daniel P. Stark, Vasily Belokurov,, Max Pettini, Edward W. Olszewski, Kristen B. W. McQuinn

TL;DR
This study characterizes blue diffuse dwarf galaxies, revealing their low metallicity, active star formation, and irregular morphology, positioning them as local analogues for early Universe galaxies.
Contribution
The paper presents a larger spectroscopic sample of BDDs, confirming their low metallicity and star-forming nature, and clarifies their relation to low-surface brightness dwarf irregular galaxies.
Findings
20% of BDDs are XMP galaxies.
BDD metallicities range from 7.43 to 8.01 in 12+log(O/H).
BDDs follow the low-mass mass-metallicity relation.
Abstract
The search for chemically unevolved galaxies remains prevalent in the nearby Universe, mostly because these systems provide excellent proxies for exploring in detail the physics of high-z systems. The most promising candidates are extremely metal-poor galaxies (XMPs), i.e., galaxies with <1/10 solar metallicity. However, due to the bright emission line based search criteria traditionally used to find XMPs, we may not be sampling the full XMP population. In 2014 we reoriented this search using only morphological properties and uncovered a population of ~150 `blue diffuse dwarf (BDD) galaxies', and published a sub-sample of 12 BDD spectra. Here we present optical spectroscopic observations of a larger sample of 51 BDDs, along with their SDSS photometric properties. With our improved statistics, we use direct-method abundances to confirm that BDDs are chemically unevolved…
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