A new population of recently quenched elliptical galaxies in the SDSS
Daniel H. McIntosh (1), Cory Wagner (1), Andrew Cooper (1), Eric F., Bell (2), Dusan Keres (3), Frank C. van den Bosch (4), Anna Gallazzi (5), Tim, Haines (1), Justin Mann (1), Anna Pasquali (6), Allison M. Christian (7) ((1), U. Missouri-Kansas City, (2) U. Michigan

TL;DR
This study identifies a new population of recently quenched elliptical galaxies in the SDSS, characterized by blue colors and young stellar ages, likely resulting from recent mergers and environmental effects.
Contribution
It uncovers and characterizes recently quenched ellipticals, revealing their properties, origins, and environments, which were previously underexplored in galaxy evolution studies.
Findings
Recently quenched ellipticals constitute 3.7% of blue, high-concentration galaxies.
172 non-star-forming ellipticals are identified as recently quenched with young stellar ages.
Most RQEs are found at group centers, supporting merger-driven quenching scenarios.
Abstract
We use the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to investigate the properties of massive elliptical galaxies in the local Universe (z\leq0.08) that have unusually blue optical colors. Through careful inspection, we distinguish elliptical from non-elliptical morphologies among a large sample of similarly blue galaxies with high central light concentrations (c_r\geq2.6). These blue ellipticals comprise 3.7 per cent of all c_r\geq2.6 galaxies with stellar masses between 10^10 and 10^11 h^{-2} {\rm M}_{\sun}. Using published fiber spectra diagnostics, we identify a unique subset of 172 non-star-forming ellipticals with distinctly blue urz colors and young (< 3 Gyr) light-weighted stellar ages. These recently quenched ellipticals (RQEs) have a number density of 2.7-4.7\times 10^{-5}\,h^3\,{\rm Mpc}^{-3} and sufficient numbers above 2.5\times10^{10} h^{-2} {\rm M}_{\sun} to account for more than half of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
