Hidden in Plain Sight: UVIT and MUSE Discovery of a Large, Diffuse Star-Forming Galaxy
Jyoti Yadav (IIA), Mousumi Das (IIA), Sudhanshu Barway (IIA) and, Francoise Combes (Observatoire de Paris)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a large, diffuse, star-forming galaxy using UV and optical observations, revealing a unique case of triggered star formation and suggesting many such galaxies might be overlooked due to superposition effects.
Contribution
The study uncovers a previously unnoticed diffuse galaxy with active star formation, demonstrating the effectiveness of UV and Hα observations in detecting such systems.
Findings
Discovery of a large, diffuse star-forming galaxy (UVIT J2022).
Evidence of multiple star formation bursts and ongoing activity.
Potential for many similar galaxies to be misclassified as interacting systems.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a nearby large, diffuse galaxy that shows star formation, using Ultra Violet Imaging Telescope (UVIT) far-UV observations, archival optical data from Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) and Dark Energy Camera Legacy Survey (DECaLS), and InfraRed Survey Facility (IRSF) near-infrared observations. The galaxy was not detected earlier due to its superposition with the background galaxy, NGC 6902A. They were together mistakenly classified as an interacting system. NGC 6902A is at a redshift of 0.05554, but MUSE observations indicate that the interacting tail is a separate star-forming, foreground galaxy at a redshift of 0.00980. We refer to the new galaxy as UVIT J202258.73-441623.8 (UVIT J2022). The near-infrared observations show that UVIT J2022 has a stellar mass of 8.710M. Its inner disk (R4 kpc) shows UV and H emission…
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