A multi-wavelength study of the evolution of Early-Type Galaxies in Groups: the ultraviolet view
R. Rampazzo, P. Mazzei, A. Marino, L. Bianchi, H. Plana, G., Trinchieri, M. Uslenghi, A. Wolter

TL;DR
This study investigates the UV properties and structural evolution of early-type galaxies in groups, revealing ongoing disk features and estimating transition timescales from Blue Cloud to Red Sequence through combined observations and simulations.
Contribution
It combines UV observations with chemo-photometric simulations to analyze galaxy evolution pathways and transition timescales in galaxy groups.
Findings
Presence of underlying disks in UV profiles of ETGs suggests ongoing dissipation processes.
Transition from Blue Cloud to Red Sequence takes 3-5 Gyr for bright galaxies.
UV imaging with current telescopes can significantly improve understanding of galaxy evolution.
Abstract
ABRIDGED- The UV-optical color magnitude diagram (CMD) of rich galaxy groups is characterised by a well developed Red Sequence (RS), a Blue Cloud (BC) and the so-called Green Valley (GV). Loose, less evolved groups of galaxies likely not virialized yet may lack a well defined RS. This is actually explained in the framework of galaxy evolution. We are focussing on understanding galaxy migration towards the RS, checking for signatures of such a transition in their photometric and morphological properties. We report on the UV properties of a sample of ETGs galaxies inhabiting the RS. The analysis of their structures, as derived by fitting a Sersic law to their UV luminosity profiles, suggests the presence of an underlying disk. This is the hallmark of dissipation processes that still must have a role in the evolution of this class of galaxies. SPH simulations with chemo-photometric…
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