Abstract

AbstractOptical and near-IR surface photometry of the halos of disk galaxies and blue compact galaxies have revealed a very red spectral energy distribution, which cannot easily be reconciled with any normal type of stellar population. Using spectral evolutionary models, we demonstrate that a stellar population with an extremely bottom-heavy initial mass function can explain the red halos of both types of objects. Because of its very high mass-to-light ratio, this halo population may account for some of the missing baryons in the local Universe.

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