Extended far-ultraviolet emission in distant dwarf galaxies
Anshuman Borgohain, Kanak Saha, Bruce Elmegreen, Rupjyoti Gogoi,, Francoise Combes, Shyam N. Tandon

TL;DR
This study discovers extended far-ultraviolet emission in distant dwarf galaxies, indicating ongoing star formation and gravitational instability in their outer regions at intermediate redshifts.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of extended FUV emission in BCDs at intermediate redshifts, revealing insights into their star formation and evolution.
Findings
Extended FUV emission has larger scale-lengths than optical profiles.
Outer FUV disks are gravitationally unstable.
Clumps in FUV are driven inward by dynamical friction.
Abstract
Blue Compact Dwarfs (BCDs) are low-luminosity (M mag), metal-poor ( ), centrally concentrated galaxies with bright clumps of star-formation. Cosmological surface brightness dimming and small size limit their detection at high redshifts, making their formation process difficult to observe. Observations of BCDs are needed at intermediate redshifts, where they are still young enough to show their formative stages, particularly in the outer regions where cosmic gas accretion should drive evolution. Here, we report the discovery of excess far-ultraviolet (FUV) emission in the outer regions of 11 BCDs in the GOODS-South field at redshifts between 0.1 and 0.24, corresponding to look back times of 1.3 - 2.8 Gyr in standard cosmology. These observations were made by the Ultra-Violet Imaging Telescope (UVIT) on AstroSat. For ten BCDs, the…
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