The continuous rise of bulges out of galactic disks
I. Breda, P. Papaderos

TL;DR
This study introduces dmB, a new measure of the contribution of old stellar populations to bulge brightness in late-type galaxies, revealing a continuous sequence of bulge properties linked to galaxy mass and suggesting a combined growth process.
Contribution
It presents dmB as a novel, distance- and extinction-independent metric and demonstrates a continuous variation of bulge properties with galaxy mass, supporting a combined bulge growth model.
Findings
High-mass bulges are older, denser, and more massive.
Bulge-to-disk age and metallicity contrast increase with galaxy mass.
Bulge growth involves both quick-early and slow-secular processes.
Abstract
(abridged) This study revolves around dmB, a new distance- and extinction-independent measure of the contribution by stellar populations older than 9 Gyr to the mean r-band surface brightness of the bulge component in 135 late-type galaxies (LTGs) from the CALIFA survey, spanning a range of 2.6 dex and 3 dex in total and bulge stellar mass (M*T~10^(8.9-11.5) M_solar and M*B~10^(8.3-11.3) M_solar, respectively). The main insight from this study is that LTG bulges form a continuous sequence of increasing dmB with increasing M*T, M*B, stellar mass surface density S* and mass-weighted age and metallicity: high-dmB bulges are the oldest, densest and most massive ones, and vice versa. Furthermore, we find that the bulge-to-disk age and metallicity contrast, as well as the bulge-to-disk mass ratio increase with M*T, raising from, respectively, ~0 Gyr, 0 dex and 0.25 to ~3 Gyr, ~0.3 dex and…
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