The origins of post-starburst galaxies at z<0.05
Milena M. Pawlik, Layth Taj Aldeen, Vivienne Wild, Jairo Mendez-Abreu,, Natalia Lah\'en, Peter H. Johansson, Noelia Jimenez, William Lucas, Yirui, Zheng, C. Jakob Walcher, Kate Rowlands

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of post-starburst galaxies at low redshift, identifying three main evolutionary pathways involving mergers, stochastic star formation, and cyclic evolution, with implications for their detection and AGN activity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the structural, environmental, and star formation properties of post-starburst galaxies, revealing multiple formation pathways and highlighting the role of AGN activity.
Findings
Most post-starburst galaxies result from major mergers causing starbursts and quenching.
A significant fraction of post-starbursts are linked to stochastic star formation in blue-sequence galaxies.
Cyclic evolution involving weak starbursts contributes to the growth of high-mass red sequence galaxies.
Abstract
Post-starburst galaxies can be identified via the presence of prominent Hydrogen Balmer absorption lines in their spectra. We present a comprehensive study of the origin of strong Balmer lines in a volume-limited sample of 189 galaxies with , and projected axis ratio . We explore their structural properties, environments, emission lines and star formation histories, and compare them to control samples of star-forming and quiescent galaxies, and simulated galaxy mergers. Excluding contaminants, in which the strong Balmer lines are most likely caused by dust-star geometry, we find evidence for three different pathways through the post-starburst phase, with most events occurring in intermediate-density environments: (1) a significant disruptive event, such as a gas-rich major merger, causing a starburst and growth of a…
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