Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): The mechanisms for quiescent galaxy formation at $z<1$
K. Rowlands, V. Wild, N. Bourne, M. Bremer, S. Brough, S. P. Driver,, A. M. Hopkins, M. S. Owers, S. Phillipps, K. Pimbblet, A. E. Sansom, L. Wang,, M. Alpaslan, J. Bland-Hawthorn, M. Colless, B. W. Holwerda, E. N. Taylor

TL;DR
This study investigates the mechanisms behind galaxy quenching at redshifts less than 1, analyzing spectroscopic data to understand the roles of different transition pathways in building the quiescent galaxy population.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the timescales and significance of fast and slow quenching processes, highlighting the evolving importance of different pathways over cosmic time.
Findings
Slow green-valley transition timescale of 2.6 Gyr at intermediate masses
Fast post-starburst quenching with a visibility timescale of 0.5 Gyr at z~0.7
Diminishing role of fast-quenching at z<1
Abstract
One key problem in astrophysics is understanding how and why galaxies switch off their star formation, building the quiescent population that we observe in the local Universe. From the GAMA and VIPERS surveys, we use spectroscopic indices to select quiescent and candidate transition galaxies. We identify potentially rapidly transitioning post-starburst galaxies, and slower transitioning green-valley galaxies. Over the last 8 Gyrs the quiescent population has grown more slowly in number density at high masses (MM) than at intermediate masses (MM). There is evolution in both the post-starburst and green valley stellar mass functions, consistent with higher mass galaxies quenching at earlier cosmic times. At intermediate masses (MM) we find a green valley transition timescale of 2.6 Gyr. Alternatively, at the entire…
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