Recent galaxy mergers and residual star formation of red sequence galaxies in galaxy clusters
Yun-Kyeong Sheen, Sukyoung K. Yi, Chang H. Ree, Yara Jaff\'e, Ricardo, Demarco, Ezequiel Treister

TL;DR
This study investigates UV properties of red sequence galaxies in galaxy clusters to identify merger-induced recent star formation, finding that internal processes may significantly contribute to residual star formation rather than mergers.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the role of galaxy mergers versus internal processes in residual star formation of red sequence galaxies in clusters.
Findings
Approximately 36-72% of post-merger galaxies show residual star formation.
No significant correlation between residual star formation and cluster sub-structures.
Only about 30% of residual star-forming galaxies show morphological merger signs.
Abstract
This study explored the GALEX ultraviolet (UV) properties of optical red sequence galaxies in 4 rich Abell clusters at z \leq 0.1. In particular, we tried to find a hint of merger-induced recent star formation (RSF) in red sequence galaxies. Using the NUV - r' colors of the galaxies, RSF fractions were derived based on various criteria for post-merger galaxies and normal galaxies. Following k-correction, about 36% of the post-merger galaxies were classified as RSF galaxies with a conservative criterion (NUV - r' \leq 5), and that number was doubled (~ 72%) when using a generous criterion (NUV - r' \leq 5.4). The trend was the same when we restricted the sample to galaxies within 0.5xR_{200}. Post-merger galaxies with strong UV emission showed more violent, asymmetric features in the deep optical images. The RSF fractions did not show any trend along the clustocentric distance within…
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