On the Transition of the Galaxy Quenching Mode at 0.5<z<1 in CANDELS
F. S. Liu, Meng Jia, Hassen M. Yesuf, S. M. Faber, David C. Koo,, Yicheng Guo, Eric F. Bell, Dongfei Jiang, Weichen Wang, Anton M. Koekemoer,, Xianzhong Zheng, Jerome J. Fang, Guillermo Barro, Pablo G., P\'erez-Gonz\'alez, Avishai Dekel, Dale Kocevski, Nimish P. Hathi, Darren

TL;DR
This study examines galaxy quenching modes at redshifts 0.5 to 1.0, revealing a mass-dependent transition from outside-in to inside-out quenching, highlighting different dominant processes for low- and high-mass galaxies.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence for a mass-dependent shift in galaxy quenching modes at intermediate redshift, linking quenching patterns to internal and external processes.
Findings
Low-mass galaxies show flat sSFR profiles, indicating outside-in quenching.
High-mass galaxies exhibit centrally suppressed sSFRs, indicating inside-out quenching.
Quenching mode depends on stellar mass, with a transition around 10^{10} solar masses.
Abstract
We investigate the galaxy quenching process at intermediate redshift using a sample of galaxies with between redshift 0.5 and 1.0 in all five CANDELS fields. We divide this sample, using the integrated specific star formation rate (sSFR), into four sub-groups: star-forming galaxies (SFGs) above and below the ridge of the star-forming main sequence (SFMS), transition galaxies and quiescent galaxies. We study their ( versus ) color gradients to infer their sSFR gradients out to twice effective radii. We show that on average both star-forming and transition galaxies at all masses are not fully quenched at any radii, whereas quiescent galaxies are fully quenched at all radii. We find that at low masses () SFGs both above and below the SFMS ridge generally have flat sSFR profiles, whereas the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
