Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-1995

Abstract

We present UBVI and Ha images of a sample of Low Surface Brightness (LSB) disk galaxies. These galaxies are generally late types, if they can be sensibly classified at all. However, they are not dwarfs, being intrinsically large and luminous. The morphology of LSB galaxies is discussed in terms of the physical interpretation of the Hubble sequence. Galaxies with high contrast relative to the sky background are subject to being more finely typed than those that appear merely as fuzzy blobs on photographic plates. This causes the stages of the Hubble sequence to be nonlinear in the sense that large morphological type distinctions are made between high surface brightness spirals when only small physical differences exist, and small morphological distinctions are made between low surface brightness galaxies even when large physical differences exist. Many LSB galaxies lack the old red disk conspicuous in higher surface brightness spirals. Their morphology is strikingly similar in all bands from U to I, suggesting fairly homogeneous stellar populations lacking a well-developed giant branch. These properties, together with their very blue colors, suggest that LSB galaxies are relatively younger than their high surface brightness counterparts. A few of these LSB galaxies appear to be very young (≲ Gyr), and as such many represent local examples of protogalaxies.

Keywords

galaxies: structure, galaxies: evolution, galaxies: peculiar, astrophysics

Publication Title

Astronomical Journal

Rights

© The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. This content is free to access, download, and share. For all other uses, you must obtain permission to reuse content: https://journals.aas.org/article-charges-and-copyright/#AAS_material

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