Bibcode
Graham, A. W.; Prieto, M.
Bibliographical reference
in Galaxy Disks and Disk Galaxies, proceeding of a conference held in Rome, Italy, June 12-16, 2000 at the Pontifical Gregorian University and sponsored by the Vatican Observatory. ASP Conference Series, Vol. 230. Edited by José G. Funes, S. J. and Enrico Maria Corsini. San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific. ISBN: 1-58381-063-3, 2001, pp. 103-104
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2001
Citations
1
Refereed citations
1
Description
Fitting exponential profiles to the bulges of the early-type spiral
galaxies from de Jong & van der Kruit (1994) under-estimates their
sizes at the 2-3 sigma significance level. Allowing for the range of
structural shapes which these bulges possess - through fitting an
r1/n profile - the mean effective bulge radius to disk
scale-length ratio, re/h, is larger for the early-type
spirals than the late-type spirals at the 1.5-2 sigma level in the
optical passbands, and only the 1 sigma level in the K-band. The
bulge-to-disk size ratio is therefore not a useful parameter for
determining morphological type in spirals. However, the central galaxy
(bulge+disk) surface brightness minus the central disk surface
brightness is significantly (>3 sigma) brighter for the early-type
spirals than the late-type spirals. Similarly, the `normalised' radius
at which the bulge and disk light contribute equally is significantly
larger for the early-type spirals, and we propose these parameters to
help quantify the Hubble sequence for spirals. If the mean bulge-to-disk
size ratio is indeed the same for early- and late-type spirals, it
implies that the bulges of late-type spirals must be relatively
submerged in the disk when compared to the bulges of early-type spirals.