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  5. An Exquisitely Deep View of Quenching Galaxies through the Gravitational Lens: Stellar Population, Morphology, and Ionized Gas
 

An Exquisitely Deep View of Quenching Galaxies through the Gravitational Lens: Stellar Population, Morphology, and Ionized Gas

Journal
THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL  
Date Issued
2021
Author(s)
Allison W. S. Man
•
Johannes Zabl
•
Gabriel B. Brammer
•
Johan Richard
•
Sune Toft
•
Mikkel Stockmann
•
GALLAZZI, Anna Rita  
•
ZIBETTI, Stefano  
•
Harald Ebeling
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/ac0ae3
Abstract
This work presents an in-depth analysis of four gravitationally lensed red galaxies at z = 1.6-3.2. The sources are magnified by factors of 2.7-30 by foreground clusters, enabling spectral and morphological measurements that are otherwise challenging. Our sample extends below the characteristic mass of the stellar mass function and is thus more representative of the quiescent galaxy population at z > 1 than previous spectroscopic studies. We analyze deep VLT/X-SHOOTER spectra and multiband Hubble Space Telescope photometry that cover the rest-frame UV-to-optical regime. The entire sample resembles stellar disks as inferred from lensing-reconstructed images. Through stellar population synthesis analysis, we infer that the targets are young (median age = 0.1-1.2 Gyr) and formed 80% of their stellar masses within 0.07-0.47 Gyr. Mg II λλ 2796, 2803 absorption is detected across the sample. Blueshifted absorption and/or redshifted emission of Mg II are found in the two youngest sources, indicative of a galactic-scale outflow of warm (T ~ 104 K) gas. The [O III] λ5007 luminosity is higher for the two young sources (median age less than 0.4 Gyr) than the two older ones, perhaps suggesting a decline in nuclear activity as quenching proceeds. Despite high-velocity (v ~ 1500 km s-1) galactic-scale outflows seen in the most recently quenched galaxies, warm gas is still present to some extent long after quenching. Altogether, our results indicate that star formation quenching at high redshift must have been a rapid process (<1 Gyr) that does not synchronize with bulge formation or complete gas removal. Substantial bulge growth is required if they are to evolve into the metal-rich cores of present-day slow rotators.
Volume
919
Issue
1
Start page
20
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/31693
Url
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-4357/ac0ae3
Issn Identifier
0004-637X
Rights
open.access
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