Are Passive Spiral Galaxies Truly "Passive" and "Spiral"? : Near-Infrared Perspective

Abstract

Passive spiral galaxies -- unusual galaxies with spiral morphology without any sign of on-going star formation -- have recently been discovered to exist preferentially in cluster infalling regions (at about the virial radius, or at a local galaxy density of 1 Mpc-2). The discovery directly connects the passive spiral galaxies to the cluster galaxy evolution studies such as the Butcher-Oemler effect or the morphology-density relation, i.e., passive spiral galaxies are likely to be transition objects between high-z blue, spiral galaxies and low-z red, cluster early-type galaxies. Thus, detailed study of passive spiral galaxies potentially could bring a new insight on the underlying physical mechanisms governing cluster galaxy evolution. However, in previous work, passive spiral galaxies are selected from the low resolution optical images with 1.5 arcsec of seeing. Therefore, passive spirals could be a mis-identification of S0 galaxies; or dusty-starburst galaxies which are not passive at all. To answer these questions, we performed a deep, high-resolution, near-infrared imaging of 32 passive spiral galaxies. Our high resolution K band images show clear spiral arm structures. Thus, passive spirals are not S0s. Optical-infrared colour does not show any signs of dusty-starburst at all. Therefore, it is likely that they are truly ``passive'' and ``spiral'' galaxies in the midst of cluster galaxy evolution.

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