Isolated elliptical galaxies in the local Universe
I. Lacerna, H. M. Hernandez-Toledo, V. Avila-Reese, J. Abonza-Sane, A., del Olmo

TL;DR
This study compares isolated and high-density elliptical galaxies, revealing environmental influences on their properties, star formation activity, and recent evolutionary processes, with a focus on blue, star-forming, and recently quenched isolated ellipticals.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of isolated elliptical galaxies, highlighting their unique properties and recent star formation history compared to cluster ellipticals.
Findings
Isolated ellipticals have a higher fraction of blue and star-forming galaxies.
Recent star formation (< 1 Gyr) is more common in isolated ellipticals.
Environmental effects on morphological transformation and quenching are generally minimal.
Abstract
We have studied a sample of 89 very isolated, elliptical galaxies at z < 0.08 and compared their properties with elliptical galaxies located in a high-density environment such as the Coma supercluster. Our aim is to probe the role of environment on the morphological transformation and quenching of elliptical galaxies as a function of mass. In addition, we elucidate the nature of a particular set of blue and star-forming isolated ellipticals identified here. We study physical properties of ellipticals such as color, specific star formation rate, galaxy size, and stellar age, as a function of stellar mass and environment based on SDSS data. We analyze the blue star-forming isolated ellipticals in more detail, through photometric characterization using GALFIT, and infer their star formation history using STARLIGHT. Among the isolated ellipticals ~ 20% are blue, 8% are star forming, and ~…
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