UV-optical colors as probes of early-type galaxy evolution

Kaviraj, S., Schawinski, K., Devriendt, J.E.G., Ferreras, I., Khochfar, S., Yoon, S.-J., Yi, S.K., Lee, Y.-W., Deharveng, J.-M., Boselli, A., Donas, J., Milliard, B., Barlow, T., Conrow, T., Forster, K., Friedman, P.G., Martin, D.C., Morrissey, P., Seibert, M., Small, T., Wyder, T., Neff, S., Schiminovich, D., Bianchi, L., Heckman, T., Szalay, A., Madore, B. and Rich, R.M. (2007) UV-optical colors as probes of early-type galaxy evolution. pp. 619-642. ISSN 0067-0049
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We have studied ∼2100 early-type galaxies in the SDSS DR3 which have been detected by the GALEX Medium Imaging Survey (MIS), in the redshift range O <z <0.1.1. Combining GALEXUV photometry with corollary optical data from the SDSS, we find that, at a 95% confidence level, at least ∼30% of galaxies in this sample have UV to optical colors consistent with some recent star formation within the last Gyr. In particular, galaxies with an NUV - r color less than 5.5 are very likely to have experienced such recent star formation, taking into account the possibility of a contribution to NUV flux from the UV upturn phenomenon. We find quantitative agreement between the observations and the predictions of a semianalytical ACDM hierarchical merger model and deduce that early-type galaxies in the redshift range 0 <z <0.11 have ∼ 1 % -3 % of their stellar mass in stars less than 1 Gyr old. The average age of this recently formed population is ∼300-500 Myr. We also find that "monolithically" evolving galaxies, where recent star formation can be driven solely by recycled gas from stellar mass loss, cannot exhibit the blue colors (NUV - r <5.5) seen in a significant fraction (∼30%) of our observed sample.

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