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The Extraordinary `Superthin' Spiral Galaxy UGC7321. I. Disk Color Gradients and Global Properties from Multiwavelength Observations

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abstract

We present B- and R-band imaging and photometry, H-alpha narrow-band imaging, NIR H-band imaging, and HI 21-cm spectroscopy of the nearby Sd spiral galaxy UGC7321. UGC7321 exhibits a remarkably thin stellar disk with no bulge component. The galaxy has a very diffuse, low surface brightness disk, which appears to suffer little internal extinction in spite of its edge-on geometry. The UGC7321 disk shows significant B-R color gradients in both the radial and vertical directions. These color gradients cannot be explained solely by dust and are indicative of changes in the mix of stellar ages and/or metallicity as a function of both radius and height above the galaxy plane. The outer regions of the UGC7321 disk are too blue to be explained by low metallicity alone (B-R<0.6), and must be relatively young. However, the galaxy also contains stellar populations with B-R>1.1, indicating it is not a young or recently-formed galaxy. The disk of UGC7321 is not a simple exponential, but exhibits a light excess at small radii, as well as distinct surface brightness zones. Together the properties of UGC7321 imply that it is an under-evolved galaxy in both a dynamical and in a star-formation sense. (Abridged)

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astro-ph.GA 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

CONDITIONAL 1

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  • Optically Selected Superthin Galaxies Remain Thin in the Near-infrared astro-ph.GA · 2026-07-01 · conditional · none · ref 18 · internal anchor

    Optically selected superthin galaxies remain superthin in NIR with unchanged axis ratios, showing no prominent thick disk from old stars, and prefer lower-density environments consistent with high-halo-spin formation.