The Complete Local Volume Groups Sample -- IV. Star formation and gas content in group-dominant galaxies
Konstantinos Kolokythas, Sravani Vaddi, Ewan O'Sullivan, Ilani, Loubser, Arif Babul, Somak Raychaudhury, Patricio Lagos, Thomas H. Jarrett

TL;DR
This study investigates star formation and gas content in group-dominant early-type galaxies, revealing that only a small fraction are actively forming stars, with gas origins likely diverse and influenced by environment and interactions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of star formation activity, gas reservoirs, and environmental effects in nearby group-dominant galaxies, highlighting the diversity of gas origins and the influence of X-ray halos.
Findings
13% of galaxies are FUV bright with recent star formation.
Most galaxies are FUV faint with little to no star formation.
Gas sources include stellar mass loss, cooling, and mergers.
Abstract
Using multi-band data we examine the star formation activity of the nearby group-dominant early-type galaxies of the Complete Local-volume Groups Sample (CLoGS), and the relation between star formation, gas content, and local environment. Only a small fraction of the galaxies (13%; 6/47) are found to be Far-Ultraviolet (FUV) bright, with FUV to near-infrared colours indicative of recent active star formation (NGC 252, NGC 924, NGC 940, NGC 1106, NGC 7252, and ESO 507-25). These systems are lenticulars presenting the highest FUV specific star-formation rates in the sample (sSFR FUV > 510 yr), significant cold gas reservoirs (M(H2)=0.5 - 6110 M), reside in X-ray faint groups, and none of them hosts a powerful radio AGN (P< W Hz). The majority of the group-dominant galaxies (87%; 41/47) are FUV faint, with no significant…
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