On the origin of red spirals: Does assembly bias play a role?
Suman Sarkar, Biswajit Pandey, Apashanka Das

TL;DR
This study investigates the role of environment and assembly bias in the formation of red spiral galaxies, finding that both local density and large-scale assembly history influence their color and properties.
Contribution
It provides evidence that assembly bias, along with local environment, contributes to the origin of red spirals, a novel insight in galaxy formation studies.
Findings
Red spirals inhabit denser regions than blue spirals.
Significant correlation between galaxy color and large-scale environment.
Assembly bias may influence galaxy color through assembly history.
Abstract
The formation of the red spirals is a puzzling issue in the standard picture of galaxy formation and evolution. Most studies attribute the colour of the red spirals to different environmental effects. We analyze a volume limited sample from the SDSS to study the roles of small-scale and large-scale environments on the colour of spiral galaxies. We compare the star formation rate, stellar age and stellar mass distributions of the red and blue spirals and find statistically significant differences between them at confidence level. The red spirals inhabit significantly denser regions than the blue spirals, explaining some of the observed differences in their physical properties. However, the differences persist in all types of environments, indicating that the local density alone is not sufficient to explain the origin of the red spirals. Using an information theoretic framework,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
