The luminosity structure and objective classification of galaxies

The luminosity structure of spiral galaxies is studied using the technique of principal component analysis. It is found that approximately 94% of the variation in the luminosity distribution of galaxies can be accounted for by just two principal components. The principal luminosity components may contain valuable information about star formation history or whatever luminosity-regulating process occurs in galaxies. Practically, these principal components provide a new approach for the investigation of the luminosity structures of galaxies and their dependence on other properties. They also serve as an excellent objective classification system for galaxies. We introduce in this paper such a classification scheme and explore its various properties. The new system shows a number of very impressive characteristics. Most important, it can well segregate virtually all the important galactic properties we tested and does so much better than the conventional morphological classification systems. Of particular interest is that some distance-dependent parameters can also be determined to a surprisingly good accuracy; for example, absolute magnitude may be determined to an accuracy of approximately 0.6 mag (yet further improvement is believed to be highly possible). Second, the system is objective, and the classification procedure can be automated to a large degree; also the new system can apply to much smaller and fainter images than do eye-based clasification systems. These properties make the new system suitable for practical application, especially on very large (and deeper) digital image catalogs. Third, the classification is expressed in dimensionless numbers, yet the simple notation bears significant and easily understandable meaning, making it easy and convenient to use. Finally, the new system has another extremely useful feature: it provides a very powerful and convenient platform not only for classification, but also for easily recording, examining, and studying the variations and correlations of galaxy properties-all these may be carried out graphically by using the C-vectors and the C-diagrams introduced in the paper. We wil also give an example to demonstrate the use of the classification system for the study of the internal extinction problem in spiral galaxies.