Physical interpretation of the near-infrared colours of low redshift galaxies
C. Eminian, G. Kauffmann, S. Charlot, V. Wild, G. Bruzual, A. Rettura,, J. Loveday

TL;DR
This study investigates how near-infrared colours of low-redshift galaxies relate to their physical properties, revealing that star formation and dust influence near-IR colours in ways consistent with stellar evolution models.
Contribution
It provides empirical analysis linking near-IR colours to galaxy properties and compares different stellar population models, highlighting the role of TP-AGB stars.
Findings
Star-forming galaxies have redder near-IR colours with higher star formation rates.
Near-IR colours strongly correlate with dust attenuation, independent of galaxy inclination.
Comparison of models shows varying predictions for near-IR colours based on AGB star treatment.
Abstract
We use empirical techniques to interpret the near-infrared colours of a sample of 5800 galaxies drawn from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) main spectroscopic sample with YJHK photometry from the UK Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) data release one. We study correlations between near-IR colours measured within SDSS fibre and physical parameters derived from the spectra. These parameters include specific star formation rate, stellar age, metallicity and dust attenuation. All correlations are analyzed for samples of galaxies that are closely matched in redshift, in stellar mass and in concentration index. Whereas more strongly star-forming galaxies have bluer optical colours, the opposite is true at near-IR wavelengths -- galaxies with higher specific star formation rate have redder near-IR colours. This result agrees qualitatively with the predictions of models in which Thermally Pulsing…
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