The UV-optical Galaxy Color-Magnitude Diagram I: Basic Properties
Ted K. Wyder (1), D. Christopher Martin (1), David Schiminovich (2),, Mark Seibert (3), Tamas Budavari (4), Marie A. Treyer (1,5), Tom A. Barlow, (1), Karl Forster (1), Peter G. Friedman (1), Patrick Morrissey (1), Susan G., Neff (6), Todd Small (1), Luciana Bianchi (4)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the ultraviolet-optical color-magnitude distribution of local galaxies, revealing distinct blue and red sequences, their properties, and the factors influencing galaxy evolution such as dust, star formation, and metallicity.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of galaxy color-magnitude relations using SDSS and GALEX data, highlighting the bimodal distribution and its dependence on physical properties.
Findings
Galaxies separate into well-defined blue and red sequences.
The color distribution shows an excess of intermediate-color galaxies.
Blue sequence galaxies' star formation rates increase with time and mass.
Abstract
We have analyzed the bivariate distribution of galaxies as a function of ultraviolet-optical colors and absolute magnitudes in the local universe. The sample consists of galaxies with redshifts and optical photometry from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) main galaxy sample matched with detections in the near-ultraviolet (NUV) and far-ultraviolet (FUV) bands in the Medium Imaging Survey being carried out by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) satellite. In the (NUV-r)_{0.1} vs. M_{r,0.1} galaxy color-magnitude diagram, the galaxies separate into two well-defined blue and red sequences. The (NUV-r)_{0.1} color distribution at each M_{r,0.1} is not well fit by the sum of two Gaussians due to an excess of galaxies in between the two sequences. The peaks of both sequences become redder with increasing luminosity with a distinct blue peak visible up to M_{r,0.1}\sim-23. The r_{0.1}-band…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
