“Dark Galaxies” and Local Very Metal-Poor Gas-Rich Glaxies: Possible Interrelations
Abstract
There are only a few "dark galaxy" candidates discovered to date in the local Universe. One of the most prominent of them is the SW component of a merging system HI 1225+01. On the other hand, the number of known very metal-poor gas-rich dwarfs similar to I Zw 18 and SBS 0335-052 E, W has grown drastically during the last decade, from a dozen and a half to about five dozen. Many of them are very gas-rich, having from ~90 to 99% of all baryons in gas. For some of such objects that have the deep photometry data, no evidences for the light of old stars are found. At least a half of such galaxies with the prominent starbursts have various evidences of interactions, including advanced mergers. This suggests that a fraction of this group objects can be a kind of very stable protogalaxies (or "dark galaxies"), which have recently experienced strong disturbances from nearby massive galaxy-size bodies. Such a collision caused the gas instabilities and its collapse with the subsequent onset of starburst. We briefly discuss the morphology and gas kinematics for the subsample of the most metal-poor dwarfs that illustrate this picture. We discuss also the relation of these rare galaxies to the processes by which "dark galaxies" can occasionally transform to optically visible galaxies.
- Publication:
-
Dark Galaxies and Lost Baryons
- Pub Date:
- May 2008
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:0708.2031
- Bibcode:
- 2008IAUS..244..341P
- Keywords:
-
- Galaxies: formation;
- evolution;
- interactions;
- dwarf;
- starburst;
- abundances;
- peculiar;
- Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 5 pages, no figures, to be published in Proc. of IAUS 244 "Dark Galaxies and Lost Baryons". Improved English, references updated