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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 August 2017
A recent analysis of the surface brightness profiles of a complete sample of 9381 spiral galaxies extracted from ESO-LV (Lauberts and Valentijn, 1989) showed that many galaxy disks of especially Sb–Sc galaxies are opaque (Valentijn, 1990). This paper studied how the observed surface brightness μobs varies as a function of the observed axial ratio a/b, by fitting the data of samples of spirals with (1) assuming the a/b to give the inclination angle of the disks to the line of sight. A sample of galaxies that were fully transparent at the particular radius used for the test would have C ≃ 1, while C <~ 0.25 signifies opaque conditions, the transition value being heavily dependent on the spatial distribution of the absorbing material and the effect of multiple scatterings (Bruzual et al. 1988). The most frequently-used C values range from 0.5–0.9 (Holmberg 1975, de Vaucouleurs et al. 1976, Sandage and Tammann 1981). However, Valentijn (1990) derived C values well below 0.25 for large samples of spirals throughout the galaxy disks; this result is not significantly affected by selection effects in either magnitude, angular diameter or axial ratio, nor by the presence of bulges (at least for types Sb and later).