A Comparison of the UV and HI Properties of the Extended UV (XUV) Disk Galaxies NGC 2541, NGC 5832 and ESO406-042
M. Das, Yadav, J., Patra, N., Dwarakanath, K.S., McGaugh, S.S.,, Schombert, J., Rahna, P.T., and Murthy, J

TL;DR
This study investigates the UV and HI properties of three extended UV (XUV) galaxies, analyzing their star formation regions and comparing UV emission with neutral hydrogen distribution to understand star formation mechanisms beyond optical disks.
Contribution
It provides new UVIT and GMRT observations of three XUV galaxies, characterizing their star formation and HI properties, especially in type 2 and mixed XUV disks, which was less explored before.
Findings
UV emission correlates with star-forming regions in extended disks.
Star formation rates vary between galaxy types and regions.
HI distribution shows patterns linked to UV emission and star formation.
Abstract
We present a UV study of 3 extended UV (XUV) galaxies that we have observed with the UVIT and the GMRT. XUV galaxies show filamentary or diffuse star formation well beyond their optical disks, in regions where the disk surface density lies below the threshold for star formation. GALEX observations found that surprisingly 30% of all the nearby spiral galaxies have XUV disks. The XUV galaxies can be broadly classified as type 1 and type 2 XUV disks. The type 1 XUV disks have star formation that is linked to that in their main disk, and the UV emission appears as extended, filamentary spiral arms. The UV luminosity is associated with compact star forming regions along the extended spiral arms. The star formation is probably driven by slow gas accretion from nearby galaxies or the intergalactic medium (IGM). But the type 2 XUV disks have star formation associated with an outer low…
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