The SAMI Galaxy Survey: Spatially resolving the environmental quenching of star formation in GAMA galaxies
A. L. Schaefer, S. M. Croom, J. T. Allen, S. Brough, A. M. Medling,, I.-T. Ho, N. Scott, S. N. Richards, M. B. Pracy, M. L. P. Gunawardhana, P., Norberg, M. Alpaslan, A. E. Bauer, K. Bekki, J. Bland-Hawthorn, J. V. Bloom,, J. J. Bryant, W. J. Couch, S. P. Driver

TL;DR
This study uses spatially-resolved spectroscopy to show that environmental density influences star formation in galaxies, leading to outside-in quenching and increased central concentration of star formation in dense environments.
Contribution
It provides new evidence of outside-in star formation quenching and the role of environment density in galaxy evolution using spatially-resolved data.
Findings
Star formation rate gradients are steeper in dense environments.
Higher environment density correlates with increased central concentration of star formation.
Star formation suppression begins in galaxy outskirts, indicating outside-in quenching.
Abstract
We use data from the Sydney-AAO Multi-Object Integral Field Spectrograph (SAMI) Galaxy Survey and the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey to investigate the spatially-resolved signatures of the environmental quenching of star formation in galaxies. Using dust-corrected measurements of the distribution of H emission we measure the radial profiles of star formation in a sample of 201 star-forming galaxies covering three orders of magnitude in stellar mass (M; -M) and in nearest neighbour local environment density (; -Mpc). We show that star formation rate gradients in galaxies are steeper in dense (Mpc) environments by r in galaxies with stellar masses in the range MM and that this…
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