What drives the ultra-violet colours of passive galaxies?

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics – Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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MNRAS accepted 9th Jan 2012

Scientific paper

We present and analyse optical and ultra-violet colours for passive and optically-red Coma cluster galaxies for which we have spectroscopic age and element abundance estimates. Our sample of 150 objects covers a wide range in mass, from giant ellipticals to the bright end of the dwarf-galaxy regime. We focus on the colours FUV-i, NUV-i, FUV-NUV, u*-g and g-i. We find that all of these colours are correlated with both luminosity and velocity dispersion at the >5 sigma level, with FUV-i and FUV-NUV becoming bluer with increasing `mass' while the other colours become redder. We perform an empirical analysis to assess what fraction of the variation in each colour can be accounted for by variations in the average stellar populations, as traced by the optical spectra. For u*-g and g-i, most of the observed scatter (~80% after allowing for measurement errors and for systematic errors in u*-g) is attributable to stellar population variations, with colours becoming redder with increasing age and metallicity (Mg/H). The FUV-i colour becomes bluer with increasing age and with increasing Mg/H, favouring a `metal-rich single-star' origin for the UV upturn. However, correlations with the optically-dominant stellar populations account for only about half of the large observed scatter. We propose that the excess scatter in FUV-i may be due to a varying proportion of ancient stars in galaxies with younger average ages. The NUV-i colour is sensitive to age and Mg/H, but exhibits excess scatter that can be attributed to `leakage' of the FUV upturn. Applying a correction based on the FUV-i colour we account for ~80% of the variance in NUV-i, as for the optical colours. The FUV-NUV colour shows strong correlations with age and Mg/H, and little residual scatter. Interpreting this colour is complicated however, since it mixes the effects from the main-sequence turn-off with those from the hot evolved stars.

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