Shadows in the Dark: Low-Surface-Brightness Galaxies Discovered in the Dark Energy Survey
D. Tanoglidis, A. Drlica-Wagner, K. Wei, T. S. Li, F. J. S\'anchez, Y., Zhang, A. H. G. Peter, A. Feldmeier-Krause, J. Prat, K. Casey, A. Palmese, C., S\'anchez, J. DeRose, C. Conselice, L. Gagnon, T. M. C. Abbott, M. Aguena, S., Allam, S. Avila, K. Bechtol, E. Bertin

TL;DR
This paper presents a large catalog of low-surface-brightness galaxies from the Dark Energy Survey, analyzing their properties, distribution, and potential as ultra-diffuse galaxies to understand their formation and environmental dependence.
Contribution
The study provides the first extensive catalog of LSBGs from DES, including their classification, distribution, and association with galaxy groups, highlighting the environmental factors influencing LSBG properties.
Findings
LSBGs show a strong bimodal color distribution.
Red LSBGs are more clustered and associated with galaxy groups.
Identified 41 ultra-diffuse galaxy candidates in prominent systems.
Abstract
We present a catalog of 23,790 extended low-surface-brightness galaxies (LSBGs) identified in from the first three years of imaging data from the Dark Energy Survey (DES). Based on a single-component S\'ersic model fit, we define extended LSBGs as galaxies with -band effective radii and mean surface brightness . We find that the distribution of LSBGs is strongly bimodal in vs.\ ) color space. We divide our sample into red () and blue () galaxies and study the properties of the two populations. Redder LSBGs are more clustered than their blue counterparts and are correlated with the distribution of nearby () bright galaxies. Red LSBGs constitute of our LSBG sample, and of these are located within 1 deg of low-redshift galaxy…
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