The Star Formation Histories of Disk Galaxies: the Live, the Dead, and the Undead
Augustus Oemler Jr (1), Louis E. Abramson (2), Michael D. Gladders, (3), Alan Dressler (1), Bianca M. Poggianti (4), Benedetta Vulcani (5), ((1) Carnegie Observatories, (2) UCLA, (3) U. Chicago/KICP, (4) Padova, Astronomical Observatory/INAF, (5) U. Melbourne)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the properties and evolution of local disk galaxies, revealing a significant population of quiescent galaxies with high gas content, and models their transition from star-forming to passive states based on gas depletion and environmental factors.
Contribution
It identifies a distinct quiescent galaxy population with high gas content and proposes a simple evolutionary model explaining their transition from star-forming to passive states.
Findings
Large population of intermediate star formation rate galaxies
Quiescent galaxies have disproportionately high gas content
Gas depletion and environmental factors drive galaxy evolution
Abstract
We reexamine the systematic properties of local galaxy populations, using published surveys of star formation, structure, and gas content. After recalibrating star formation measures, we are able to reliably measure specific star formation rates well below the "main sequence" of star formation vs mass. We find an unexpectedly large population of galaxies with star formation rates intermediate between vigorously star-forming main sequence galaxies and passive galaxies, and with gas content disproportionately high for their star formation rates. Several lines of evidence suggest that these quiescent galaxies form a distinct population rather than a low star formation tail of the main sequence. We demonstrate that a tight main sequence, evolving with epoch, is a natural outcome of most histories of star formation and has little astrophysical significance, but that the quiescent population…
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