The properties and environment of very young galaxies in the local Universe
M. Trevisan, G. A. Mamon, T. X. Thuan, F. Ferrari, L. S. Pilyugin, A., Ranjan

TL;DR
This study analyzes very young galaxies in the local universe, revealing their properties, environments, and suggesting that interactions and mergers primarily trigger their recent star formation activities.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of a large sample of local very young galaxies, highlighting their distinct properties and environmental factors compared to control galaxies.
Findings
VYGs are more compact, dusty, and gas-rich than control galaxies.
VYGs are more often found in inner group regions and are more likely to be interacting.
Star formation in VYGs is mainly triggered by interactions and mergers.
Abstract
In the local Universe, there is a handful of dwarf compact star-forming galaxies with extremely low oxygen abundances. It has been proposed that they are young, having formed a large fraction of their stellar mass during their last few hundred Myr. However, little is known about the fraction of young stellar populations in more massive galaxies. In a previous article, we analyzed 280 000 SDSS spectra to identify a surprisingly large sample of more massive Very Young Galaxies (VYGs), defined to have formed at least of their stellar mass within the last 1 Gyr. Here, we investigate in detail the properties of a subsample of 207 galaxies that are VYGs according to all three of our spectral models. We compare their properties with those of control sample galaxies (CSGs). We find that VYGs tend to have higher surface brightness and to be more compact, dusty, asymmetric, and clumpy than…
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