The Origin of the 24-micron Excess in Red Galaxies
Kate Brand, John Moustakas, Lee Armus, Roberto J. Assef, Michael J. I., Brown, Richard R. Cool, Vandana Desai, Arjun Dey, Emeric Le Floc'h, Buell T., Jannuzi, Christopher S. Kochanek, Jason Melbourne, Casey J. Papovich, B. T., Soifer

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of 24-micron infrared excess in red galaxies, revealing that most are due to star formation and AGN activity, often occurring simultaneously, challenging reliance on optical diagnostics alone.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the infrared excess in red galaxies, demonstrating the significant role of star formation and AGN activity, and highlighting the limitations of optical diagnostics.
Findings
64% of 24-micron excess red galaxies likely have strong PAH emission.
Only 15% show optical signs of star formation, indicating obscured activity.
Approximately 40% are edge-on spirals with high extinction.
Abstract
Observations with the Spitzer Space Telescope have revealed a population of red-sequence galaxies with a significant excess in their 24-micron emission compared to what is expected from an old stellar population. We identify 900 red galaxies with 0.15<z<0.3 from the AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey (AGES) selected from the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey Bootes field. Using Spitzer/MIPS, we classify 89 (~10%) with 24-micron infrared excess (f24>0.3 mJy). We determine the prevalence of AGN and star-formation activity in all the AGES galaxies using optical line diagnostics and mid-IR color-color criteria. Using the IRAC color-color diagram from the IRAC Shallow Survey, we find that 64% of the 24-micron excess red galaxies are likely to have strong PAH emission features in the 8-micron IRAC band. This fraction is significantly larger than the 5% of red galaxies with f24<0.3 mJy that are…
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