Measuring distances to low-luminosity galaxies using surface brightness fluctuations

Johnny P. Greco, Pieter Van Dokkum, Shany Danieli, Scott G. Carlsten, Charlie Conroy

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

We present an in-depth study of surface brightness fluctuations (SBFs) in low-luminosity stellar systems. Using the MIST models, we compute theoretical predictions for absolute SBF magnitudes in the LSST, HST ACS/WFC, and proposed Roman Space Telescope filter systems. We compare our calculations to observed SBF-color relations of systems that span a wide range of age and metallicity. Consistent with previous studies, we find that single-age population models show excellent agreement with observations of low-mass galaxies with 0.5≤g-i≤0.9. For bluer galaxies, the observed relation is better fit by models with composite stellar populations. To study SBF recovery from low-luminosity systems, we perform detailed image simulations in which we inject fully populated model galaxies into deep ground-based images from real observations. Our simulations show that LSST will provide data of sufficient quality and depth to measure SBF magnitudes with precisions of ~0.2-0.5 mag in ultrafaint (104 ≤ M∗/M⊙ ≤ 105) and low-mass classical (M∗≤.107 M⊙) dwarf galaxies out to ~4 Mpc and ~25 Mpc, respectively, within the first few years of its deep-wide-fast survey. Many significant practical challenges and systematic uncertainties remain, including an irreducible "sampling scatter"in the SBFs of ultra-faint dwarfs due to their undersampled stellar mass functions. We nonetheless conclude that SBFs in the new generation of wide-field imaging surveys have the potential to play a critical role in the efficient confirmation and characterization of dwarf galaxies in the nearby universe.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberabd030
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume908
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Feb 2021
Externally publishedYes

Funding

FundersFunder number
National Science Foundation
Directorate for Mathematical and Physical Sciences1801921

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