High resolution morphology and surface photometry of KIG 685 and KIG 895 with ARGOS+LUCI
R. Rampazzo, M. Uslenghi, I.Y. Giorgiev, A. Cattapan, L., Verdes-Montenegro, M. Bonaglia, J.L. Borelli, L. Busoni, W. Gaessler, D ., Magrin, A. Marino, P. Mazzei, T. Mazzoni, D. Peter, S. Rabien, R. Ragazzoni, and M. Rosensteiner

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution K-band imaging with ARGOS+LUCI at LBT to analyze the morphology of two isolated galaxies, revealing structural details and signs of past interactions, with implications for galaxy classification and evolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed morphological analysis of KIG 685 and KIG 895 using advanced imaging and modeling techniques, highlighting interaction signatures and structural components.
Findings
KIG 685 is an S0 galaxy with ring/shell structures suggesting past accretion.
KIG 895 is a bulge-less late-type spiral with interaction signatures.
High-resolution imaging revealed detailed galaxy structures and interaction evidence.
Abstract
We aim to refine the sample of isolated early-type galaxies in the AMIGA catalogue via high resolution imaging. Here we report the result from a pilot study investigating two candidates, KIG 685 and KIG 895, in K-band with the laser guide star and wavefront sensing facility ARGOS} at LBT. Observations, obtained during commissioning time, achieved a PSF of ~0.25". We present the data reduction and the PSF analysis from the best closed loop exposures to investigate the galaxies' morphological structure, including their nuclear region. We used PROFILER for the decomposition of the azimuthal 1D light distribution and GALFIT for the 2D analysis, accounting for ARGOS's PSF. KIG 685 was found to be a S0 galaxy and has been modeled with two Sersic components representing a pseudo-bulge (n_{1D}=2.87+-0.21, n_{2D}=2.29+-0.10) and a disk (n_{1D}=0.95+-0.16, n_{2D}=0.78+-0.10). Nearly symmetric…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Systems and Laser Technology · Optical Polarization and Ellipsometry
