Euclid: Early Release Observations -- The surface brightness and colour profiles of the far outskirts of galaxies in the Perseus cluster
M. Mondelin, F. Bournaud, J.-C. Cuillandre, S. Codis, C. Stone, M. Bolzonella, J.G. Sorce, M. Kluge, N.A. Hatch, F.R. Marleau, M. Schirmer, H. Bouy, F. Buitrago, C. Tortora, L. Quilley, K. George, M. Baes, T. Saifollahi, P.M. Sanchez-Alarcon, J.H. Knapen, N. Aghanim, A. Amara

TL;DR
This study uses Euclid's early observations to analyze the surface brightness and colour profiles of galaxies in the Perseus cluster, revealing how environmental factors influence galaxy structure and evolution.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the distribution and evolution of galaxy surface brightness profiles in dense cluster environments, utilizing unprecedented depth data from Euclid.
Findings
Type II profiles are stabilized by internal mechanisms like bars.
Type III profiles often have older stellar populations.
Profile types vary with galaxy mass and morphology.
Abstract
The Perseus field captured by Euclid as part of its Early Release Observations provides a unique opportunity to study cluster environment ranging from outskirts to dense regions. Leveraging unprecedented optical and near-infrared depths, we investigate the stellar structure of massive disc galaxies in this field. This study focuses on outer disc profiles, including simple exponential (Type I), down- (Type II) and up-bending break (Type III) profiles, and their associated colour gradients, to trace late assembly processes across various environments. Type II profiles, though relatively rare in high dense environments, appear stabilised by internal mechanisms like bars and resonances, even within dense cluster cores. Simulations suggest that in dense environments, Type II profiles tend to evolve into Type I profiles over time. Type III profiles often exhibit small colour gradients beyond…
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