The Loneliest Galaxies in the Universe: A GAMA and GalaxyZoo Study on Void Galaxy Morphology [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.05999


The large-scale structure (LSS) of the Universe is comprised of galaxy filaments, tendrils, and voids. The majority of the Universe’s volume is taken up by these voids, which exist as underdense, but not empty, regions. The galaxies found inside these voids are expected to be some of the most isolated objects in the Universe. This study, using the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) and Galaxy Zoo surveys, aims to investigate basic physical properties and morphology of void galaxies versus field (filament and tendril) galaxies. We use void galaxies with stellar masses of $9.35 < log(M/M_\odot) < 11.25$, and this sample is split by identifying two redshift-limited regions, 0 < z < 0.075, and, $0.075 < z < 0.15$. To find comparable objects in the sample of field galaxies from GAMA and Galaxy Zoo, we identify “twins” of void galaxies as field galaxies within $\pm$0.05 dex and $\pm$0.15 dex of M and specific star formation rate. We determine the statistical significance of our results using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov (KS) test. We see that void galaxies, in contrast with field galaxies, seem to be disk-dominated and have predominantly round bulges (with > 50 percent of the Galaxy Zoo citizen scientists agreeing that bulges are present).

Read this paper on arXiv…

L. Porter, B. Holwerda, S. Kruk, et. al.
Thu, 13 Apr 23
38/59

Comments: 13 pages, 16 figures, 3 tables, accepted by MNRAS