ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We obtained GALEX FUV, NUV, and Spitzer/IRAC 3.6$mu$m photometry for > 2000 galaxies, available for 90% of the S4G sample. We find a very tight GALEX Blue Sequence (GBS) in the (FUV-NUV) versus (NUV-[3.6]) color-color diagram which is populated by irregular and spiral galaxies, and is mainly driven by changes in the formation timescale ($tau$) and a degeneracy between $tau$ and dust reddening. The tightness of the GBS provides an unprecedented way of identifying star-forming galaxies and objects that are just evolving to (or from) what we call the GALEX Green Valley (GGV). At the red end of the GBS, at (NUV-[3.6]) > 5, we find a wider GALEX Red Sequence (GRS) mostly populated by E/S0 galaxies that has a perpendicular slope to that of the GBS and of the optical red sequence. We find no such dichotomy in terms of stellar mass (measured by $rm{M}_{[3.6]}$), since both massive ($M_{star} > 10^{11} M_{odot}$) blue and red sequence galaxies are identified. The type that is proportionally more often found in the GGV are the S0-Sas and most of these are located in high-density environments. We discuss evolutionary models of galaxies that show a rapid transition from the blue to the red sequence on timescale of $10^{8}$years.
We present GALEX data for 44 Galactic globular clusters obtained during 3 GALEX observing cycles between 2004 and 2008. This is the largest homogeneous data set on the UV photometric properties of Galactic globular clusters ever collected. The sample
We present our new, spatially-resolved, photometry in FUV and NUV from images obtained by GALEX, and IRAC1 (3.6 $mu$m) photometry obtained by the Spitzer Space Telescope. We analyzed the surface brightness profiles $mu_{rm{FUV}}$, $mu_{rm{NUV}}$, $mu
We introduce a new quantity, the mass flux density of galaxies evolving from the blue sequence to the red sequence. We propose a simple technique for constraining this mass flux using the volume corrected number density in the extinction-corrected UV
Globular Clusters (GCs) in the Milky Way are the primary laboratories for establishing the ages of the oldest stellar populations and for measuring the color-magnitude relation of stars. In infrared (IR) color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs), the stellar m
We present GALEX UV observations of a sample of Low Surface Brightness (LSB) galaxies for which HI data are available, allowing us to estimate their star formation efficiency. We find that the UV light extends to larger radii than the optical light (