Slow-then-rapid quenching as traced by tentative evidence for enhanced metallicities of cluster galaxies at z~0.2 in the slow quenching phase
C. Maier (1), B. L. Ziegler (1), C. P. Haines (2), and G. P. Smith (3), ((1) University of Vienna (2) INAF Brera (3) University of Birmingham)

TL;DR
This study investigates the slow-then-rapid quenching process in cluster galaxies at z~0.2, revealing that metallicity increases during the slow phase while star formation persists, followed by rapid quenching near the cluster center.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence for a slow-then-rapid quenching scenario, linking metallicity enhancement to gas inflow cessation and ram-pressure stripping in cluster galaxies.
Findings
Metallicities are higher inside R200 compared to the field.
Quenching timescales are estimated at 1-2 Gyrs.
A two-phase quenching process is supported by data.
Abstract
(Abridged) We explore 7 clusters from LoCuSS at z~0.2 with spectra of 1965 cluster members from the ACReS Hectospec survey covering a region which corresponds to about three virial radii for each cluster. We measure fluxes of five emission lines of cluster members enabling us to unambiguously derive O/H gas metallicities, and also SFRs from extinction corrected Halpha fluxes. We compare our cluster galaxy sample with a field sample of 705 galaxies at similar redshifts observed with Hectospec. We find that star-forming cluster and field galaxies show similar median specific SFRs in a given mass bin, but their O/H values are displaced to higher values at projected radii of R<R200 compared with galaxies at larger radii and in the field. The comparison with metallicity-SFR-mass model predictions with inflowing gas indicates a slow-quenching scenario in which strangulation is initiated when…
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