Is NGC 300 a pure exponential disk galaxy?
In Sung Jang, Roelof S. de Jong, I. Minchev, Eric F. Bell, Antonela, Monachesi, Benne W. Holwerda, Jeremy Bailin, Adam Smercina, Richard D'Souza

TL;DR
This study uses deep HST data to analyze the stellar populations and density profiles of NGC 300, revealing multiple structural breaks and old stellar populations in the outskirts, challenging its classification as a pure exponential disk galaxy.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed stellar density and population analysis of NGC 300's outer regions, revealing complex structural features not consistent with a pure exponential disk.
Findings
Detected two density profile breaks at 5.9 and 8.3 kpc.
Found a uniformly old and metal-poor stellar population beyond 8 kpc.
Challenged the classification of NGC 300 as a pure exponential disk.
Abstract
NGC 300 is a low-mass disk galaxy in the Sculptor group. In the literature, it has been identified as a pure exponential disk galaxy, as its luminosity profile could be well fitted with a single exponential law over many disk scale lengths (Type I). We investigate the stellar luminosity distribution of NGC 300 using (HST) archive data, reaching farther and deeper than any other previous studies. Color magnitude diagrams show a significant population of old red giant branch (RGB) stars in all fields out to kpc (), as well as younger populations in the inner regions. We construct the density profiles of the young, intermediate-aged, and old stellar populations. We find two clear breaks in the density profiles of the old RGB and intermediate-aged stars: one down-bending (Type II) at kpc, and another up-bending (Type III) at …
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