The structure of post-starburst galaxies at $0.5 < z < 2$: evidence for two distinct quenching routes at different epochs
David T. Maltby (1), Omar Almaini (1), Vivienne Wild (2), Nina A., Hatch (1), William G. Hartley (3), Chris Simpson (4), Kate Rowlands (5) and, Miguel Socolovsky (1) ((1) Nottingham, (2) St Andrews, (3) UCL, (4) Gemini,, (5) Johns Hopkins)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the structural differences of post-starburst galaxies across redshifts $0.5 < z < 2$, revealing two distinct quenching mechanisms at different cosmic epochs based on galaxy compactness and morphology.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of PSB galaxy structures at different redshifts, identifying two separate quenching routes linked to galaxy mass and epoch.
Findings
High-redshift PSBs are massive, compact, and similar to passive galaxies.
Low-redshift PSBs are less massive, less concentrated, and resemble passive discs.
PSB structures are consistent across optical and near-infrared bands.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the structure of post-starburst (PSB) galaxies in the redshift range , using a photometrically-selected sample identified in the Ultra Deep Survey (UDS) field. We examine the structure of of these transient galaxies using radial light profiles obtained from CANDELS near-infrared/optical imaging, and compare to a large sample of passive and star-forming galaxies. For each population, we determine their typical structural properties (effective radius , S\'ersic index ) and find significant differences in PSB structure at different epochs. At high redshift (), PSBs are typically massive (), very compact and exhibit high S\'ersic indices, with structures that differ significantly from their star-forming progenitors but are similar to massive…
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