The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS). XXX. Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies and their Globular Cluster Systems
Sungsoon Lim, Patrick C\^ot\'e, Eric W. Peng, Laura Ferrarese, Joel C., Roediger, Patrick R. Durrell, J. Christopher Mihos, Kaixiang Wang, S.D.J., Gwyn, Jean-Charles Cuillandre, Chengze Liu, Rub\'en S\'anchez-Janssen, Elisa, Toloba, Laura V. Sales, Puragra Guhathakurta

TL;DR
This study investigates ultra-diffuse galaxies in the Virgo Cluster using deep imaging, revealing their structural diversity, globular cluster systems, and environmental influences, and proposing a new definition based on galaxy scaling relations.
Contribution
Introduces a new definition for UDGs based on scaling relations and analyzes their properties and globular cluster systems in the Virgo Cluster.
Findings
UDGs are significantly fainter than previously known UDGs.
UDGs show diverse globular cluster specific frequencies.
Some UDGs are shaped by tidal interactions and low-mass mergers.
Abstract
We present a study of ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) in the Virgo Cluster based on deep imaging from the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS). Applying a new definition for the UDG class based on galaxy scaling relations, we define samples of 44 and 26 UDGs using expansive and restrictive selection criteria, respectively. Our UDG sample includes objects that are significantly fainter than previously known UDGs: i.e., more than half are fainter than mag arcsec. The UDGs in Virgo's core region show some evidence for being structurally distinct from "normal" dwarf galaxies, but this separation disappears when considering the full sample of galaxies throughout the cluster. UDGs are more centrally concentrated in their spatial distribution than other Virgo galaxies of similar luminosity, while their morphologies demonstrate that at least some UDGs…
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.
