Active Galactic Nuclei and the Truncation of Star Formation in K+A Galaxies
Michael J. I. Brown, John Moustakas, Nelson Caldwell, David Palamara,, Richard J. Cool, Arjun Dey, Ryan Hickox, Buell T. Jannuzi, Stephen S. Murray,, Dennis Zaritsky

TL;DR
This study investigates the presence of active galactic nuclei in K+A galaxies, suggesting that AGN activity and galaxy mergers are linked to the rapid truncation of star formation in these galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first multiwavelength analysis of AGN activity in K+A galaxies, highlighting the role of mergers and AGN feedback in star formation cessation.
Findings
Approximately 50% of K+A galaxies show optical AGN signatures.
About 33% of luminous K+A galaxies host X-ray detected AGNs.
Star formation truncation is likely rapid (<100 Myr) and possibly merger-driven.
Abstract
We have searched for active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in K+A galaxies, using multiwavelength imaging and spectroscopy in the Bootes field of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey. The K+A galaxies, which have had their star formation rapidly truncated, are selected via their strong Balmer absorption lines and weak H-alpha emission. Our sample consists of 24 K+A galaxies selected from 6594 0.10<z<0.35 galaxies brighter than I=20 with optical spectroscopy from the AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey. Two thirds of the K+A galaxies are likely ongoing galaxy mergers, with nearby companion galaxies or tidal tails. Galaxy mergers may be responsible for the truncation of star formation, or we are observing the aftermath of merger triggered starbursts. As expected, the optical colors of K+A galaxies largely fall between blue galaxies with ongoing star formation and red passive galaxies. However, only 1% of…
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