Evidence of Star Formation in Local S0 Galaxies: Spitzer Observations of the SAURON Sample
Pasquale Temi (1), Fabrizio Brighenti (2,3), William G. Mathews (3);, ((1) NASA - Ames Research Center, (2) Universita' di Bologna, (3) UC Santa, Cruz)

TL;DR
This study presents Spitzer infrared observations revealing that some local S0 galaxies exhibit signs of ongoing star formation in dusty gas disks, contrasting with the passive nature of elliptical galaxies.
Contribution
It provides evidence that cold dusty gas in S0 galaxies is created by stellar mass loss and consumed by star formation, with infrared data linking molecular gas to recent star formation.
Findings
S0 galaxies show a wider range of IR luminosities than ellipticals.
Infrared emission in S0s indicates low-level star formation in dusty disks.
IR luminosities correlate with molecular gas mass and stellar Hbeta index in S0s.
Abstract
We discuss infrared Spitzer observations of early type galaxies in the SAURON sample at 24, 60 and 170 microns. When compared with 2MASS Ks band luminosities, lenticular (S0) galaxies exhibit a much wider range of mid to far-infrared luminosities then elliptical (E) galaxies. Mid and far-infrared emission from E galaxies is a combination of circumstellar or interstellar emission from local mass-losing red giant stars, dust buoyantly transported from the galactic cores into distant hot interstellar gas and dust accreted from the environment. The source of mid and far-IR emission in S0 galaxies is quite different and is consistent with low levels of star formation, 0.02 - 0.2 Msol/yr, in cold, dusty gaseous disks. The infrared 24micron-70micron color is systematically lower for (mostly S0) galaxies with known molecular disks. Our observations support the conjecture that cold dusty gas in…
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