The SAMI Galaxy Survey: bulge and disk stellar population properties in cluster galaxies
S. Barsanti, M. S. Owers, R. M. McDermid, K. Bekki, J. Bland-Hawthorn,, S. Brough, J. J. Bryant, L. Cortese, S. M. Croom, C. Foster, J. S. Lawrence,, A. R. L\'opez-S\'anchez, S. Oh, A. S. G. Robotham, N. Scott, S. M. Sweet, J., van de Sande

TL;DR
This study investigates the stellar population differences between bulges and disks in cluster galaxies, revealing that bulges are generally redder and more metal-rich, with diverse age relations, shedding light on lenticular galaxy formation in dense environments.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of bulge and disk stellar populations in cluster galaxies using multi-method approaches, highlighting metallicity and age differences and their implications for galaxy evolution.
Findings
62% of galaxies have bulges more metal-rich than disks
23% of galaxies have older bulges than disks
Redder bulges are more metal-rich, not older
Abstract
We explore stellar population properties separately in the bulge and the disk of double-component cluster galaxies to shed light on the formation of lenticular galaxies in dense environments. We study eight low-redshift clusters from the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field (SAMI) Galaxy Survey, using 2D photometric bulge-disk decomposition in the , and -bands to characterize galaxies. For 192 double-component galaxies with we estimate the color, age and metallicity of the bulge and the disk. The analysis of the colors reveals that bulges are redder than their surrounding disks with a median offset of 0.120.02 mag, consistent with previous results. To measure mass-weighted age and metallicity we investigate three methods: (i) one based on galaxy stellar mass weights for the two components, (ii) one based on flux weights and (iii) one…
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