A massive, quiescent, population II galaxy at a redshift of 2.1
Mariska Kriek, Charlie Conroy, Pieter G. van Dokkum, Alice E. Shapley,, Jieun Choi, Naveen A. Reddy, Brian Siana, Freeke van de Voort, Alison L., Coil, Bahram Mobasher

TL;DR
This study measures the magnesium-to-iron ratio in a massive galaxy at redshift 2.1, revealing it formed stars rapidly and early, similar to Population II stars, and is the most Mg-enhanced galaxy observed at such an epoch.
Contribution
First measurement of [Mg/Fe] in a galaxy at z=2.1 using full spectral fitting, providing new insights into early galaxy formation and chemical enrichment.
Findings
Galaxy has [Mg/Fe]=0.59+/-0.11, indicating rapid early star formation.
Enrichment is consistent with core-collapse supernovae only.
Star-formation timescale estimated at 0.1-0.5 Gyr.
Abstract
Unlike spiral galaxies such as the Milky Way, the majority of the stars in massive elliptical galaxies were formed in a short period early in the history of the Universe. The duration of this formation period can be measured using the ratio of magnesium to iron abundance ([Mg/Fe]), which reflects the relative enrichment by core-collapse and type Ia supernovae. For local galaxies, [Mg/Fe] probes the combined formation history of all stars currently in the galaxy, including younger and metal-poor stars that were added during late-time mergers. Therefore, to directly constrain the initial star-formation period, we must study galaxies at earlier epochs. The most distant galaxy for which [Mg/Fe] had previously been measured is at z~1.4, with [Mg/Fe]=0.45(+0.05,-0.19). A slightly earlier epoch (z~1.6) was probed by stacking the spectra of 24 massive quiescent galaxies, yielding an average…
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