Stellar Populations of over one thousand $z\sim0.8$ Galaxies from LEGA-C: Ages and Star Formation Histories from D$_n$4000 and H$\delta$
Po-Feng Wu, Arjen van der Wel, Anna Gallazzi, Rachel Bezanson, Camilla, Pacifici, Caroline Straatman, Marijn Franx, Ivana Bari\v{s}i\'c, Eric F., Bell, Gabriel B. Brammer, Joao Calhau, Priscilla Chauke, Josha van Houdt,, Michael V. Maseda, Adam Muzzin, Hans-Walter Rix

TL;DR
This study uses high-quality spectroscopic data from the LEGA-C survey to analyze stellar populations and star formation histories of over a thousand galaxies at redshift ~0.8, revealing bimodal age distributions and insights into galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effectiveness of high-resolution spectroscopy in constraining galaxy formation models at intermediate redshifts, highlighting differences from local galaxy populations.
Findings
Bimodal distribution of galaxy ages at z~0.8.
Massive galaxies are predominantly older than 2 Gyr.
Star-forming galaxies show stronger Hδ absorption than local counterparts.
Abstract
Drawing from the LEGA-C dataset, we present the spectroscopic view of the stellar population across a large volume- and mass-selected sample of galaxies at large lookback time. We measure the 4000\AA\ break (D4000) and Balmer absorption line strengths (probed by H) from 1019 high-quality spectra of galaxies with . Our analysis serves as a first illustration of the power of high-resolution, high-S/N continuum spectroscopy at intermediate redshifts as a qualitatively new tool to constrain galaxy formation models. The observed D4000-EW(H) distribution of our sample overlaps with the distribution traced by present-day galaxies, but galaxies populate that locus in a fundamentally different manner. While old galaxies dominate the present-day population at all stellar masses $>…
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