The Mid-Infrared and Near-Ultraviolet Excess Emissions of Quiescent Galaxies on the Red Sequence
Jongwan Ko, Ho Seong Hwang, Jong Chul Lee, and Young-Jong Sohn

TL;DR
This study investigates the presence of mid-infrared and near-ultraviolet excess emissions in quiescent red-sequence galaxies, revealing recent star formation activity and proposing an evolutionary sequence among these galaxies.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the recent star formation history of quiescent galaxies using WISE and GALEX data, highlighting an evolutionary link between different excess emission states.
Findings
26% of quiescent galaxies show near-UV excess
55% of quiescent galaxies show mid-IR excess
Recent star formation is significant in these galaxies
Abstract
We study the mid-infrared (IR) and near-ultraviolet (UV) excess emissions of spectroscopically selected quiescent galaxies on the optical red sequence. We use the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer ({\it WISE}) mid-IR and Galaxy Evolution Explorer ({\it GALEX}) near-UV data for a spectroscopic sample of galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7 to study the possible connection between quiescent red-sequence galaxies with and without mid-IR/near-UV excess. Among 648 12 m detected quiescent red-sequence galaxies without H emission, 26% and 55% show near-UV and mid-IR excess emissions, respectively. When we consider only bright ( 21.5) galaxies with early-type morphology, the fraction of galaxies with recent star formation is still 39%. The quiescent red-sequence galaxies with mid-IR and near-UV excess emissions are optically fainter and have…
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