Toward Understanding the Evolutionary Role of Star-forming Lenticular Galaxies: New HI Detections and Comparison with Quiescent S0s and Red Spirals
Pei-Bin Chen, Junfeng Wang, Tian-Wen Cao, Mengting Shen, and Xiaoyu Xu

TL;DR
This study investigates star-forming lenticular galaxies, revealing their structural, stellar population, and gas properties, and compares them with quiescent S0s and red spirals to understand their evolutionary pathways.
Contribution
It provides new HI detections and comprehensive analysis of star-forming S0s, highlighting their similarities with quiescent S0s and red spirals, and discusses their potential evolution.
Findings
Star-forming S0s have size-mass relations similar to quiescent S0s and red spirals.
They exhibit intermediate stellar population profiles between quiescent S0s/red spirals and blue spirals.
HI mass distribution of star-forming S0s matches that of normal blue spirals.
Abstract
As one type of blue early-type galaxies, the evolutionary history and fate of star-forming lenticular galaxies (S0s) remain elusive. We selected 134 star-forming S0s from the SDSS-IV MaNGA survey and found that they have steep and warped size-mass relations, similar to quiescent S0s and red spirals, indicating that they may have similar gas dissipation scenarios. These galaxies have a higher central stellar mass surface density than normal blue spirals. The radial profiles of and [Mgb/Fe] show that red spirals and quiescent S0s have similar old central populations and high [Mgb/Fe] values, suggesting rapid bulge formation, though red spirals exhibit a steeper gradient possibly due to residual star formation (SF) in outer regions. In contrast, star-forming S0s exhibit profiles between quiescent S0s/red spirals and normal blue spirals, with relatively flat …
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