Spatially resolved stellar-to-total dynamical mass relation: Radial variations, gradients and profiles of galaxy stellar populations
L. Scholz-Diaz, A. R. Gallazzi, S. Zibetti, D. Mattolini

TL;DR
This study investigates how spatially resolved stellar populations and their gradients vary with stellar and total dynamical mass in galaxies, revealing the influence of dark matter halos on galaxy evolution and properties.
Contribution
It introduces the use of spatially resolved stellar population profiles in relation to the stellar-to-total dynamical mass relation, highlighting the role of dark matter in shaping galaxy properties.
Findings
Age and metallicity profiles depend on both stellar and total mass.
Age gradients are more negative in higher total mass galaxies.
Metallicity gradients are steeper in early-type galaxies.
Abstract
Although galaxy evolution is governed by the interplay between baryonic physics and dark matter halo assembly, how halo properties shape observed galaxies remains unclear. With current challenges in measuring halo properties, the stellar-to-total dynamical mass relation is introduced as an alternative metric sensitive to the dark matter content within galaxies. We explore how spatially resolved stellar population properties vary across this relation using optical IFS data and photometry from 265 CALIFA galaxies. Spatially resolved ages and metallicities, [M/H], are derived using a Bayesian framework fed with a library of model spectra based on stochastic star formation and metallicity histories and dust attenuation. We study these properties in terms of both stellar and total dynamical mass, with the latter being enclosed mass within three effective radii from Jeans dynamical modeling.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Statistical Mechanics and Entropy
