The evolution of star formation histories of quiescent galaxies
Camilla Pacifici, Susan A. Kassin, Benjamin J. Weiner, Bradford, Holden, Jonathan P. Gardner, Sandra M. Faber, Henry C. Ferguson, David C., Koo, Joel R. Primack, Eric F. Bell, Avishai Dekel, Eric Gawiser, Mauro, Giavalisco, Marc Rafelski, Raymond C. Simons, Guillermo Barro

TL;DR
This study investigates the star formation histories of quiescent galaxies across redshifts 0.2 to 2.1, revealing mass-dependent growth and quenching timescales that inform galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It applies physically motivated spectral energy distribution models to a large galaxy sample, uncovering mass-dependent star formation and quenching timescales.
Findings
Low-mass galaxies have slow growth and rapid decline in star formation.
High-mass galaxies grow quickly and decline slowly.
Quenching mechanisms vary with galaxy mass and operate on different timescales.
Abstract
Although there has been much progress in understanding how galaxies evolve, we still do not understand how and when they stop forming stars and become quiescent. We address this by applying our galaxy spectral energy distribution models, which incorporate physically motivated star formation histories (SFHs) from cosmological simulations, to a sample of quiescent galaxies at . A total of 845 quiescent galaxies with multi-band photometry spanning rest-frame ultraviolet through near-infrared wavelengths are selected from the CANDELS dataset. We compute median SFHs of these galaxies in bins of stellar mass and redshift. At all redshifts and stellar masses, the median SFHs rise, reach a peak, and then decline to reach quiescence. At high redshift, we find that the rise and decline are fast, as expected because the Universe is young. At low redshift, the duration of these phases…
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