The Optical Green Valley vs Mid-IR Canyon in Compact Groups
Lisa May Walker, Natalie Butterfield, Kelsey Johnson, Catherine, Zucker, Sarah Gallagher, Iraklis Konstantopoulos, Ann Zabludoff, Ann E., Hornschemeier, Panayiotis Tzanavaris, and Jane C. Charlton

TL;DR
This study compares optical and mid-infrared properties of galaxies in compact groups, revealing that mid-IR transition galaxies are already on the optical red sequence, unlike in other environments.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of galaxy colors in compact groups, highlighting the environmental effects on galaxy evolution and the absence of mid-IR transition galaxies in these settings.
Findings
Compact groups are dominated by optically red galaxies.
Mid-IR transition galaxies in compact groups are on the optical red sequence.
Lack of mid-IR transition galaxies may be due to fewer low-mass, star-forming galaxies.
Abstract
Compact groups of galaxies provide conditions similar to those experienced by galaxies in the earlier universe. Recent work on compact groups has led to the discovery of a dearth of mid-infrared transition galaxies (MIRTGs) in IRAC (3.6 - 8.0 micron) color space (Johnson et al. 2007; Walker et al. 2012) as well as at intermediate specific star formation rates (Tzanavaris et al. 2010). However, we find that in compact groups these mid-infrared (mid-IR) transition galaxies in the mid-infrared dearth have already transitioned to the optical ([g-r]) red sequence. We investigate the optical color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of 99 compact groups containing 348 galaxies and compare the optical CMD with mid-IR color space for compact group galaxies. Utilizing redshifts available from SDSS, we identified new galaxy members for 6 groups. By combining optical and mid-IR data, we obtain information on…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
