R. Giovanelli et al., DEPENDENCE ON LUMINOSITY OF PHOTOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF DISK GALAXIES -SURFACE BRIGHTNESS, SIZE, AND INTERNAL EXTINCTION, The Astronomical journal, 110(3), 1995, pp. 1059-1070
A sample of more than 1700 galaxies for which I band CCD images, redsh
ifts, and H I lines velocity widths are available is used to study the
dependence on luminosity of the main photometric parameters of spiral
disks. For some derivations, the sample is complemented by other data
in the public domain. The impact of sample selection criteria on the
distribution function of observed parameters is monitored vis-a-vis sa
mple visibility functions and by inspecting the properties of Monte Ca
rlo simulations of the data. Significant dependences on luminosity are
found for the disk central surface brightness and for the relations t
hat convert isophotal radii, scale lengths, and magnitudes to the edge
-on perspective. These dependences are tightly wedded to the extinctio
n processes that operate in disks. The amount of internal extinction a
t I band depends both on disk inclination and galaxy luminosity: more
luminous edge-on galaxies appear to be dimmed more than less luminous
ones. Corrections of the isophotal radius at mu(I)=23.5 mag arcsec(-2)
to the face-on perspective are larger for intrinsically faint galaxie
s. At that isophote, the less luminous galaxies appear to be completel
y transparent while the photometric profiles of highly inclined, lumin
ous objects may still be affected by extinction. The relative amount o
f internal extinction suggests that the ratio of scale heights for the
stellar and dust components of the disk decreases with increasing lum
inosity. Adoption of inadequate extinction laws that do not take into
account the luminosity dependence can affect the slope of the Tully-Fi
sher relation and may introduce nonlinearity, resulting in both a lumi
nosity bias and an inclination bias in the predicted galaxy distances.
(C) 1995 American Astronomical Society.