Properties of Low Surface Brightness Galaxies and Normal Spirals in the Near-IR
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(Abridged) We present results for J and Ks near-IR imaging data on a large sample of 88 galaxies drawn from the catalogue of Impey et al. (1996). The near-IR data unveils many features of LSBGs not seen before in the optical. First, a high fraction of the observed LSBGs are very luminous in the near-IR, indicating that they have a well developed old stellar population, and that older LSBGs are more frequent in the universe than data from optical bands suggested. Second, the near-IR morphologies are often quite different than seen in the optical. Third, we find significant trends between the near-IR morphologies of the galaxies and their ratio of HI mass to near-IR luminosity. Fourth, we find no trend in disk surface brightness with absolute magnitude, but significant correlations when the bulge surface brightness is used. Finally, we find that the formation of a bulge requires a galaxy to have a total baryonic mass above ~ 10**10 Msun. A wide variety of other correlations are explored for the sample. The strongest of our correlations are with the ratio of HI mass to total baryonic mass, MHI/Mbaryonic, which tracks the evolutionary state of the galaxies as they convert gas into stars, and which ranges from 0.05 up to nearly 1 for the galaxies in our sample. We see also trends between MHI/Mbaryonic and central surface density, suggesting that increased star formation efficiency with increasing gas surface density strongly drives the conversion of gas into stars.
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