The Nature of Massive Transition Galaxies in CANDELS, GAMA, and Cosmological Simulations
Viraj Pandya, Ryan Brennan, Rachel S. Somerville, Ena Choi, Guillermo, Barro, Stijn Wuyts, Edward N. Taylor, Peter Behroozi, Allison Kirkpatrick,, Sandra M. Faber, Joel Primack, David C. Koo, Daniel H. McIntosh, Dale, Kocevski, Eric F. Bell, Avishai Dekel, Jerome J. Fang

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxies transition from star-forming to quiescent states across cosmic time using observations and simulations, revealing different quenching pathways and physical properties of transition galaxies.
Contribution
It combines observational data with semi-analytic and hydrodynamical simulations to analyze the physical characteristics and timescales of galaxy quenching up to redshift 3.
Findings
Transition galaxies have intermediate structural properties.
High-redshift galaxies quench faster than low-redshift ones.
Multiple physical pathways for galaxy quenching are identified.
Abstract
We explore observational and theoretical constraints on how galaxies might transition between the "star-forming main sequence" (SFMS) and varying "degrees of quiescence" out to . Our analysis is focused on galaxies with stellar mass , and is enabled by GAMA and CANDELS observations, a semi-analytic model (SAM) of galaxy formation, and a cosmological hydrodynamical "zoom in" simulation with momentum-driven AGN feedback. In both the observations and the SAM, transition galaxies tend to have intermediate S\'ersic indices, half-light radii, and surface stellar mass densities compared to star-forming and quiescent galaxies out to . We place an observational upper limit on the average population transition timescale as a function of redshift, finding that the average high-redshift galaxy is on a "fast track" for quenching whereas the average low-redshift galaxy…
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