Photometric decomposition of edge-on galaxies indicates that projection effects cause a substantially higher fraction of Type II disk breaks than reported in previous work.
The stellar disk thickness of LSB galaxies
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abstract
We present surface photometry results for a sample of eleven edge-on galaxies observed with the 6m telescope at the Special Astrophysical Observatory (Russia). The photometric scale length, scale height, and central surface brightness of the stellar disks of our sample galaxies are estimated. We show that four galaxies in our sample, which are visually referred as objects of the lowest surface brightness class in the Revised Flat Galaxies Catalog, have bona fide low surface brightness (LSB) disks. We find from the comparison of photometric scales that the stellar disks of LSB galaxies are thinner than those of high surface brightness (HSB) ones. There is a clear correlation between the central surface brightness of the stellar disk and its vertical to radial scale ratio. The masses of spherical subsystems (dark halo + bulge) and the dark halo masses are obtained for the sample galaxies based on the thickness of their stellar disks. The LSB galaxies tend to harbor more massive spherical subsystems than the HSB objects, whereas no systematic difference in the dark halo masses between LSB and HSB galaxies is found. At the same time, the inferred mass-to-luminosity ratio for the LSB disks appears to be systematically higher than for HSB disks.
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astro-ph.GA 2years
2026 2verdicts
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The EGIDE project releases a tenfold larger catalogue of edge-on galaxies with griz photometry, stellar masses, redshifts and star formation rates, finding that red-sequence galaxies are thicker than blue-cloud ones and show a mass-dependent increase in flattening ratio.
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Projection-Enhanced Disk Breaks: Evidence from Deep Photometric Decomposition
Photometric decomposition of edge-on galaxies indicates that projection effects cause a substantially higher fraction of Type II disk breaks than reported in previous work.
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The Edge-on Galaxies in the DESI survey (EGIDE): sample building and photometry
The EGIDE project releases a tenfold larger catalogue of edge-on galaxies with griz photometry, stellar masses, redshifts and star formation rates, finding that red-sequence galaxies are thicker than blue-cloud ones and show a mass-dependent increase in flattening ratio.