-
Articles citing this article
-
Same authors
- Recommend this article
- Download citation
- Alert me if this article is cited
- Alert me if this article is corrected
|
||||||||||||||||||
A&A 399, L35-L38 (2003)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20030081
Letter
The z
0.1 surface brightness distribution
K. O'Neil, S. Andreon and J.-C. Cuillandre NAIC/Arecibo Observatory, HC3 Box 53995, Arecibo, PR 00612, USA INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera, via Brera 28, 20121 Milano, Italy Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Corporation, PO Box 1597, Kamuela, HI 96743
(Received 22 May 2002 / Accepted 15 January 2003)
Abstract
The surface brightness distribution (SBD) function describes the
number density of galaxies as measured against their central
surface brightness. Because detecting galaxies with low central surface
brightnesses is both time-consuming and complicated, determining the
shape of this distribution function can be difficult.
In a recent paper Cross et al. suggested
a bell-shaped SBD disk-galaxy function which peaks near the canonical Freeman
value of 21.7 and then falls off significantly by 23.5
B mag arcsec
-2.
This is in contradiction to previous studies which have typically
found flat (slope = 0) SBD functions out to 24-25
B mag arcsec
-2
(the survey limits). Here we take advantage of a
recent surface-brightness limited survey by Andreon & Cuillandre which
reaches considerably fainter magnitudes than the Cross et al. sample
(
MB reaches fainter than -12 for Andreon & Cuillandre while
the Cross et al. sample is limited to
MB<-16)
to re-evaluate both the SBD function as found by their data and the SBD
for a wide variety of galaxy surveys, including the Cross et al. data.
The result is a SBD function with a flat slope out through
the survey limits of 24.5
B mag arcsec
-2, with high confidence limits.
Offprint request: K. O'Neil, koneil@naic.edu
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2003
| What is OpenURL? |
- If your librarian has set up your subscription with an OpenURL resolver, OpenURL links appear automatically on the abstract pages.
- You can define your own OpenURL resolver with your EDPS Account. In this case your choice will be given priority over that of your library.
- You can use an add-on for your browser (Firefox or I.E.) to display OpenURL links on a page (see http://www.openly.com/openurlref/). You should disable this module if you wish to use the OpenURL server that you or your library have defined.

BibSonomy
CiteUlike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook