H-ATLAS/GAMA: The nature and characteristics of optically red galaxies detected at submillimetre wavelengths
A. Dariush, S. Dib, S. Hony, D. J. B. Smith, S. Zhukovska, L. Dunne,, S. Eales, E. Andrae, M. Baes, I. Baldry, A. Bauer, J. Bland-Hawthorn, S., Brough, N. Bourne, A. Cava, D. Clements, M. Cluver, A. Cooray, G. De Zotti,, S. Driver, M. W. Grootes, A. M. Hopkins, R. Hopwood

TL;DR
This study combines Herschel submillimeter data with multi-wavelength observations to analyze the properties of optically red galaxies, revealing their morphological diversity, dust content, and environmental similarities with blue galaxies.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the nature of optically red galaxies at low redshift, especially their dust properties and morphological classifications, using combined submm and optical data.
Findings
Red galaxies constitute about 4.2% of massive sources.
Over 30% of red galaxies are early-type, and over 40% are spirals.
Red ellipticals have lower dust-to-stellar mass ratios and star formation rates.
Abstract
We combine Herschel/SPIRE sub-millimeter (submm) observations with existing multi-wavelength data to investigate the characteristics of low redshift, optically red galaxies detected in submm bands. We select a sample of galaxies in the redshift range 0.01z0.2, having >5 detections in the SPIRE 250 micron submm waveband. Sources are then divided into two sub-samples of and galaxies, based on their UV-optical colours. Galaxies in the sample account for 4.2 per cent of the total number of sources with stellar masses M10 Solar-mass. Following visual classification of the galaxies, we find that 30 per cent of them are early-type galaxies and 40 per cent are spirals. The colour of the -spiral galaxies could be the result of their highly inclined orientation and/or a strong contribution of the old…
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