The Halos and Environments of Nearby Galaxies (HERON) Survey

We have used dedicated 0.7m telescopes in California and Israel to image the halos of ~ 200 galaxies in the Local Volume to 29 mag/sq arcsec, the sample mainly drawn from the 2MASS Large Galaxy Atlas (LGA). We supplement the LGA sample with dwarf galaxies and more distant giant ellipticals. Low surf...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union 2016-03, Vol.11 (S321), p.186-189
Hauptverfasser: Rich, R. Michael, Brosch, Noah, Bullock, James, Burkert, Andreas, Collins, Michelle, de Groot, Laura, Kennefick, Julia, Koch, Andreas, Longstaff, Francis, Sales, Laura
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container_end_page 189
container_issue S321
container_start_page 186
container_title Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union
container_volume 11
creator Rich, R. Michael
Brosch, Noah
Bullock, James
Burkert, Andreas
Collins, Michelle
de Groot, Laura
Kennefick, Julia
Koch, Andreas
Longstaff, Francis
Sales, Laura
description We have used dedicated 0.7m telescopes in California and Israel to image the halos of ~ 200 galaxies in the Local Volume to 29 mag/sq arcsec, the sample mainly drawn from the 2MASS Large Galaxy Atlas (LGA). We supplement the LGA sample with dwarf galaxies and more distant giant ellipticals. Low surface brightness halos exceeding 50 kpc in diameter are found only in galaxies more luminous than L*, and classic interaction signatures are relatively infrequent. Halo diameter is correlated with total galaxy luminosity. Extended low surface brightness halos are present even in galaxies as faint as MV = - 18. Edge-on galaxies with boxy bulges tend to lack extended spheroidal halos, while those with large classical bulges exhibit extended round halos, supporting the notions that boxy or barlike bulges originate from disks. Most face-on spiral galaxies present features that appear to be irregular extensions of spiral arms, although rare cases show smooth boundaries with no sign of star formation. Although we serendipitously discovered a dwarf galaxy undergoing tidal disruption in the halo of NGC 4449, we found no comparable examples in our general survey. A search for similar examples in the Local Volume identified hcc087, a tidally disrupting dwarf galaxy in the Hercules Cluster, but we do not confirm an anomalously large half-light radius reported for the dwarf VCC 1661.
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source Cambridge University Press Journals Complete
subjects Astronomy
Contributed Papers
Disks
Dwarf galaxies
Galactic bulge
Galactic clusters
Galactic halos
Galactic structure
Luminosity
Smooth boundaries
Spiral galaxies
Star & galaxy formation
Star formation
Stars & galaxies
Surface brightness
Telescopes
title The Halos and Environments of Nearby Galaxies (HERON) Survey
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