The VIMOS Public Extragalactic Redshift Survey (VIPERS): Downsizing of the blue cloud and the influence of galaxy size on mass quenching over the last eight billion years
C. P. Haines, A. Iovino, J. Krywult, L. Guzzo, I. Davidzon, M., Bolzonella, B. Garilli, M. Scodeggio, B. R. Granett, S. de la Torre, G. De, Lucia, U. Abbas, C. Adami, S. Arnouts, D. Bottini, A. Cappi, O. Cucciati, P., Franzetti, A. Fritz, A. Gargiulo, V. Le Brun, O. Le Fevre

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy star formation and structure have evolved over the last eight billion years, revealing downsizing, size-related quenching, and the growth of galaxy bulges leading to quiescence.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the size-mass relation of blue cloud galaxies and the role of bulge growth in galaxy quenching over cosmic time.
Findings
High-mass blue cloud limit decreases from z~0.9 to z~0.
Massive blue galaxies rapidly become quiescent between z~0.8 and z~0.5.
Quenching is linked to bulge growth and structural changes.
Abstract
We use the full VIPERS redshift survey in combination with SDSS-DR7 to explore the relationships between star-formation history (using d4000), stellar mass and galaxy structure, and how these relationships have evolved since z~1. We trace the extents and evolutions of both the blue cloud and red sequence, by fitting double Gaussians to the d4000 distribution of galaxies in narrow stellar mass bins, for four redshift intervals over 0<z<1. This reveals downsizing in star formation, as the high-mass limit of the blue cloud retreats steadily with time from M*~10^11.2 M_sun at z~0.9 to M*~10^10.7 M_sun by the present day. The number density of massive blue-cloud galaxies (M*>10^11 M_sun, d4000<1.55) drops sharply by a factor five between z~0.8 and z~0.5. These galaxies are becoming quiescent at a rate that largely matches the increase in the numbers of massive passive galaxies seen over this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
