MOIRCS Deep Survey. X. Evolution of Quiescent Galaxies as a Function of Stellar Mass at 0.5<z<2.5
Masaru Kajisawa, Takashi Ichikawa, Tomohiro Yoshikawa, Toru Yamada,, Masato Onodera, Masayuki Akiyama, Ichi Tanaka

TL;DR
This study investigates how the population of quiescent galaxies evolves from redshift 2.5 to 0.5, revealing that more massive galaxies quench star formation earlier, leading to a mass-dependent evolution in galaxy populations.
Contribution
First deep NIR imaging-based analysis of quiescent galaxies down to 10^{10} Msun at z~2, highlighting mass-dependent quenching and evolution of galaxy populations.
Findings
Number density of quiescent galaxies increases significantly from z~2.5 to z~0.5.
Massive galaxies show higher fraction of quiescence at all redshifts.
Quenching is more effective in more massive galaxies at 1<z<2.
Abstract
We study the evolution of quiescent galaxies at 0.5<z<2.5 as a function of stellar mass, using very deep NIR imaging data taken with the Multi-Object Infrared Camera and Spectrograph on the Subaru Telescope in the GOODS-North region. The deep NIR data allow us to construct a stellar mass-limited sample of quiescent galaxies down to ~10^{10} Msun even at z~2 for the first time. We selected quiescent galaxies with age/tau>6 by performing SED fitting of the multi broad-band photometry from the U to Spitzer 5.8um bands with the population synthesis model of Bruzual & Charlot (2003) where exponentially decaying star formation histories are assumed. The number density of quiescent galaxies increases by a factor of ~3 from 1.0<z<1.5 to 0.5<z<1.0, and by a factor of ~10 from 1.5<z<2.5 to 0.5<z<1.0, while that of star-forming galaxies with age/tau<4 increases only by factors of ~2 and ~3 in the…
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