CLEAR I: Ages and Metallicities of Quiescent Galaxies at $\mathbf{1.0 < z < 1.8}$ Derived from Deep Hubble Space Telescope Grism Data
Vicente Estrada-Carpenter, Casey Papovich, Ivelina Momcheva, Gabriel, Brammer, James Long, Ryan F. Quadri, Joanna Bridge, Mark Dickinson, Henry, Ferguson, Steven Finkelstein, Mauro Giavalisco, Catherine M. Gosmeyer,, Jennifer Lotz, Brett Salmon, Rosalind E. Skelton

TL;DR
This study uses deep Hubble Space Telescope grism spectroscopy to determine the ages and metallicities of massive quiescent galaxies at redshifts 1.0 to 1.8, revealing rapid early enrichment and formation histories.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of ages and metallicities of high-redshift quiescent galaxies using grism data, demonstrating early stellar mass assembly and chemical enrichment.
Findings
Most galaxies formed >68% of their mass by z>2
Galaxies had near-solar metallicities by z~3
Ages range from 2 to 3.2 Gyr at z~1.1 to 1.6
Abstract
We use deep \textit{Hubble Space Telescope} spectroscopy to constrain the metallicities and (\editone{light-weighted}) ages of massive () galaxies selected to have quiescent stellar populations at . The data include 12--orbit depth coverage with the WFC3/G102 grism covering ~\AA\, at a spectral resolution of taken as part of the CANDELS Lyman- Emission at Reionization (CLEAR) survey. At , the spectra cover important stellar population features in the rest-frame optical. We simulate a suite of stellar population models at the grism resolution, fit these to the data for each galaxy, and derive posterior likelihood distributions for metallicity and age. We stack the posteriors for subgroups of galaxies in different redshift ranges that include different combinations of stellar absorption…
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