J-PAS: unprecedented precision in stellar populations of diffuse tidal features
Sepideh Eskandarlou, Mohammad Akhlaghi, Francisco Arizo-Borillo, Johan H. Knapen, Helena Dom\'inguez S\'anchez, Juan Antonio Fern\'andez-Ontiveros, Carlos L\'opez-Sanjuan, Rosa Mar\'ia Gonz\'alez Delgado, Yolanda Jim\'enez Teja, Renato Dupke, Yves Revaz, Pascale Jablonka

TL;DR
J-PAS's extensive narrow-band imaging enables unprecedented detailed analysis of stellar populations in faint, diffuse tidal features of merging galaxies, surpassing traditional spectroscopic and broad-band methods.
Contribution
This study demonstrates the effectiveness of J-PAS narrow-band photometry in accurately characterizing stellar populations in tidal features, offering a significant improvement over previous techniques.
Findings
J-PAS provides fourfold better precision in stellar mass and Dn(4000) measurements.
J-PAS indicates a less metal-rich, rapidly quenched stellar population in tidal features.
Heuristic methods overestimate stellar mass compared to J-PAS SED fitting.
Abstract
Galaxies frequently interact with nearby systems, a process that can significantly alter their morphology and star formation activity. However, spectroscopic studies of their faint and diffuse remnants require very long exposure times and often exceed the limited field of view of integral field units (IFUs). On the other hand, broad-band imaging can have a much wider field of view, but lacks the spectral resolution to identify key spectral features, restricting accurate constraints on stellar population properties. With its 54 narrow-band filters in the optical and wide coverage (planned 8000 square degrees), J-PAS fills this gap. In this case study, we examine PGC 3087775, a massive galaxy at z = 0.046179 (~ 201 Mpc) in the later stages of a major merger in the J-PAS early data release. Photometry was validated with MaNGA IFU data (for the central part). Stellar population properties…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
