The edges of the stellar populations of early type spirals as probed by their radial brightness profiles
Abstract
We have derived radial sky-subtracted surface brightness profiles of a sample of 42 face-on nearby early-type spiral galaxies, classified as unbarred, from SDSS data as well as our own observations (INT/WFC) at La Palma. A key objective was to derive the fraction of truncated profiles. We find that only a small minority 7% of the galaxies are obviously truncated within the limits of the measured surface brightness range, while some 20% show exponential disc profiles but with a shallower inner portion near the centre: classical "Freeman Type II" profiles (Freeman, 197). Half of the discs show a single unbroken exponential ("type I") brightness profile with no evidence of truncation out to the edge of detectability, while the remainder show "antitruncations": external profiles less steep than those of the internal disc (Type III). A general profile classification scheme based on these and other recent related measurements is presented, and will be of use in probing disc formation scenarios.
- Publication:
-
Stellar Populations as Building Blocks of Galaxies
- Pub Date:
- August 2007
- DOI:
- 10.1017/S1743921307008861
- Bibcode:
- 2007IAUS..241..495B
- Keywords:
-
- Galaxy disks;
- brightness profiles;
- truncations;
- antitruncations