Gas Mass Fractions and Star Formation in Blue-Sequence E/S0 Galaxies
L. H. Wei (1), S. J. Kannappan (2), S. N. Vogel (1), A. J. Baker (3), ((1) University of Maryland, (2) University of North Carolina, (3) Rutgers, University)

TL;DR
This study investigates blue-sequence E/S0 galaxies, revealing they contain significant atomic gas reservoirs and can grow their stellar disks substantially within a few billion years, indicating potential evolution into spiral galaxies.
Contribution
It provides new HI data for low-mass blue-sequence E/S0s and demonstrates their capacity for disk regrowth through gas infall and star formation.
Findings
Many blue-sequence E/S0s have gas-to-stellar mass ratios similar to spirals.
These galaxies can increase their stellar mass by 10-60% in 3 Gyr.
Star formation appears bursty and externally triggered in these galaxies.
Abstract
Recent work has identified a population of low-redshift E/S0 galaxies that lie on the blue sequence in color vs. stellar mass parameter space, where spiral galaxies typically reside. While high-mass blue-sequence E/S0s often resemble young merger or interaction remnants likely to fade to the red sequence, we focus on blue-sequence E/S0s with lower stellar masses (< a few 10^10 M_sun), which are characterized by fairly regular morphologies and low-density field environments where fresh gas infall is possible. This population may provide an evolutionary link between early-type galaxies and spirals through disk regrowth. Focusing on atomic gas reservoirs, we present new GBT HI data for 27 E/S0s on both sequences as well as a complete tabulation of archival HI data for other galaxies in the Nearby Field Galaxy Survey. Normalized to stellar mass, the atomic gas masses for 12 of the 14…
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