The Spectral Energy Distribution of Post-Starburst Galaxies in the NEWFIRM Medium-Band Survey: A Low Contribution from TP-AGB Stars
Mariska Kriek, Ivo Labbe, Charlie Conroy, Katherine Whitaker, Pieter, van Dokkum, Gabriel Brammer, Marijn Franx, Garth Illingworth, Danilo, Marchesini, Adam Muzzin, Ryan Quadri, and Gregory Rudnick

TL;DR
This study uses post-starburst galaxies to evaluate stellar population synthesis models, revealing that current models overestimate the contribution of TP-AGB stars to galaxy spectral energy distributions.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that the TP-AGB contribution in SPS models is significantly lower than recent predictions, refining galaxy evolution modeling.
Findings
Bruzual & Charlot models fit the SED well
Maraston models overpredict near-infrared luminosity
TP-AGB stars contribute less than predicted by latest models
Abstract
Stellar population synthesis (SPS) models are a key ingredient of many galaxy evolution studies. Unfortunately, the models are still poorly calibrated for certain stellar evolution stages. Of particular concern is the treatment of the thermally-pulsing asymptotic giant branch (TP-AGB) phase, as different implementations lead to systematic differences in derived galaxy properties. Post-starburst galaxies are a promising calibration sample, as TP-AGB stars are thought to be most prominently visible during this phase. Here, we use post-starburst galaxies in the NEWFIRM medium-band survey to assess different SPS models. The available photometry allows the selection of a homogeneous and well-defined sample of 62 post-starburst galaxies at 0.7<z<2.0, from which we construct a well-sampled composite spectral energy distribution (SED) over the range 1200-40 000 Angstrom. The SED is well-fit by…
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