Bibcode
Morelli, L.; Corsini, E. M.; Pizzella, A.; Dalla Bontà, E.; Coccato, L.; Méndez-Abreu, J.; Cesetti, M.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 423, Issue 1, pp. 962-982.
Advertised on:
6
2012
Citations
36
Refereed citations
32
Description
We present the radial profiles of the Hβ, Mg and Fe
line-strength indices for a sample of eight spiral galaxies with a
low-surface-brightness stellar disc and a bulge. The correlations
between the central values of the line-strength indices and velocity
dispersion are consistent with those known for early-type galaxies and
bulges of high-surface-brightness galaxies. The age, metallicity and
α/Fe enhancement of the stellar populations in the bulge-dominated
region are obtained using stellar population models with variable
element abundance ratios. Almost all the sample bulges are characterized
by a young stellar population, ongoing star formation and a solar
α/Fe enhancement. Their metallicity spans from high to subsolar
values. No significant gradient in age and α/Fe enhancement is
measured, whereas a negative metallicity gradient is found only in a few
cases. These properties suggest that a pure dissipative collapse cannot
explain the formation of all the sample bulges and that other phenomena,
such as mergers or acquisition events, need to be invoked. Such a
picture is also supported by the lack of a correlation between the
central value and the gradient of the metallicity in bulges with very
low metallicity. The stellar populations of the bulges hosted by
low-surface-brightness discs share many properties with those of
high-surface-brightness galaxies. Therefore, they are likely to have
common formation scenarios and evolution histories. A strong interplay
between bulges and discs is ruled out by the fact that, in spite of
being hosted by discs with extremely different properties, the bulges of
low- and high-surface-brightness discs are remarkably similar. Based on
observations made with European Southern Observatory telescopes at the
La Silla Paranal Observatory under programmes 76.B-0375 and 80.B-00754.
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