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A&A 410, 481-509 (2003)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20031147
New insights to the photometric structure of Blue Compact Dwarf galaxies from deep Near-Infrared studies
I. Observations, surface photometry and decomposition of surface brightness profiles
K. G. Noeske, P. Papaderos, L. M. Cairós and K. J. FrickeUniversitäts-Sternwarte, Geismarlandstraße 11, 37083 Göttingen, Germany
(Received 8 October 2002 / Accepted 22 July 2003 )
Abstract
We have analyzed deep Near Infrared (NIR) broad band images
for a sample of Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies (BCDs), observed with the
ESO NTT
and Calar Alto 3.6 m
telescopes.
The data presented here allows for the detection and quantitative
study of the extended stellar low-surface brightness (LSB) host
galaxy in all sample BCDs.
NIR surface brightness profiles (SBPs) of the LSB host galaxies
agree at large galactocentric radii with those from optical studies,
showing also an exponential intensity decrease and compatible scale lengths.
At small to intermediate radii (within 1-3 exponential scale lengths), however,
the NIR data reveals for more than one half of our sample BCDs evidence for
a significant flattening of the exponential profile of the LSB component.
Such profiles (type V SBPs, Binggeli & Cameron 1991) have rarely been
detected in the LSB component of BCDs at optical wavelengths, where
the relative flux contribution of the starburst, being stronger than in
the NIR, can readily hide a possible central intensity depression in
the underlying LSB host.
The structural properties, frequency and physical origin of type V LSB profiles in
BCDs and dwarf galaxies in general have not yet been subject
to systematic studies.
Nevertheless, the occurrence of such profiles
in an appreciable fraction of BCDs would impose important
new observational constraints to the radial mass distribution
of the stellar LSB component, as well as to the photometric
fading of these systems after the termination of star-forming
activities.
We test the suitability of two empirical fitting functions,
a modified exponential distribution (Papaderos et al. 1996a)
and the Sérsic law, for the systematization of the structural
properties of BCD host galaxies which show a type V intensity
distribution. Either function has been found to satisfactorily
fit a type V distribution.
However, it is argued that the practical applicability
of Sérsic fits to the LSB emission of BCDs is limited by the
extreme sensitivity of the achieved solutions to,
e.g., small uncertainties in the sky subtraction
and SBP derivation.
We find that most of the sample BCDs show in their stellar LSB host galaxy optical-NIR
colors indicative of an evolved stellar population with subsolar metallicity.
Unsharp-masked NIR maps reveal numerous morphological details and
indicate in some cases, in combination with optical data,
appreciable non-uniform dust absorption
on a spatial scale as large as ~1 kpc.
Key words: galaxies: dwarf -- galaxies: evolution -- galaxies: structure -- galaxies: starburst
Offprint request: K. G. Noeske, knoeske@uni-sw.gwdg.de
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2003
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