Impact of young stellar components on quiescent galaxies: deconstructing cosmic chronometers
M. Lopez-Corredoira, A. Vazdekis

TL;DR
This paper investigates how young stellar components within quiescent galaxies affect cosmic chronometer measurements of the universe's expansion, revealing significant contamination impacts on age estimates and cosmological model tests.
Contribution
It introduces a new approach to distinguish systematic and statistical errors and evaluates the influence of young stellar contamination on galaxy age estimates used in cosmology.
Findings
Young stellar contamination can constitute up to a third of the luminosity at 4000 Å.
Contamination significantly biases galaxy age estimates and H(z) measurements.
Some cosmological models become compatible with observations when contamination is considered.
Abstract
Cosmic chronometers may be used to measure the age difference between passively evolving galaxy populations to calculate the Hubble parameter H(z). The age estimator emerges from the relationship between the amplitude of the rest frame Balmer break at 4000 angstroms and the age of a galaxy, assuming that there is one single stellar population within each galaxy. However, recent literature has shown possible contamination (up to 2.4% of the stellar mass in a high redshift sample) of a young component embedded within the predominantly old population of the quiescent galaxy. We compared the data with the predictions of each model, using a new approach of distinguishing between systematic and statistical errors (in previous works, these had incorrectly been added in quadrature) and evaluating the effects of contamination by a young stellar component. The ages inferred using cosmic…
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