Red Misfits in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey: Properties of Star-forming Red Galaxies
Abstract
We study Red Misfits, a population of red, star-forming galaxies in the local
Universe. We classify galaxies based on inclination-corrected optical colours
and specific star formation rates derived from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Data Release 7. Although the majority of blue galaxies are star-forming and
most red galaxies exhibit little to no ongoing star formation, a small but
significant population of galaxies ($\sim$11 per cent at all stellar masses)
are classified as red in colour yet actively star-forming. We explore a number
of properties of these galaxies and demonstrate that Red Misfits are not simply
dusty or highly-inclined blue cloud galaxies or quiescent red galaxies with
poorly-constrained star formation. The proportion of Red Misfits is nearly
independent of environment and this population exhibits both intermediate
morphologies and an enhanced likelihood of hosting an AGN. We conclude that Red
Misfits are a transition population, gradually quenching on their way to the
red sequence and this quenching is dominated by internal processes rather than
environmentally-driven processes. We discuss the connection between Red Misfits
and other transition galaxy populations, namely S0's, red spirals and green
valley galaxies.