The Outer Disks of Early-Type Galaxies. II. Surface-Brightness Profiles of Unbarred Galaxies and Trends with Hubble Type

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics – Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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Accepted for publication in AJ. 35 pages, 14 figures, 7 tables

Scientific paper

We present azimuthally averaged radial profiles of R-band surface brightness for a complete sample of 47 early-type, unbarred galaxies, as a complement to our previous study of early-type barred galaxies. Following very careful sky subtraction, the profiles can typically be determined down to brightness levels well below 27 mag arcsec^{-2} and in the best cases below 28 mag arcsec^{-2}. We classified the profiles according to the scheme used previously for the barred sample: Type I profiles are single unbroken exponential radial declines in brightness; Type II profiles ("truncations") have an inner shallow slope (usually exponential) which changes at a well defined break radius to a steeper exponential; and Type III profiles ("antitruncations") have an inner exponential that is steeper, giving way to a shallower outer (usually exponential) decline. By combining these profiles with previous studies, we can make the first clear statements about the trends of outer-disk profile types along the Hubble sequence (including both barred and unbarred galaxies), and their global frequencies. We find that Type I profiles are most frequent in early-type disks, decreasing from one-third of all S0--Sa disks to barely 10% of the latest type spirals. Conversely, Type II profiles (truncations) increase in frequency with Hubble type, from only ~25% of S0 galaxies to ~80% of Sd--Sm spirals. Overall, the fractions of Type I, II, and III profiles for all disk galaxies (Hubble types S0--Sm) are: 21%, 50%, and 38%, respectively; this includes galaxies (~8% of the total) with composite Type II+III profiles (counted twice). Finally, we note the presence of bars in ten galaxies previously classified (optically) as "unbarred". This suggests that ~20% of optically unbarred galaxies are actually barred; the bars in such cases can be weak, obscured by dust, or so large as to be mistaken for the main disk

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