Quenching timescales of galaxies in the EAGLE simulations
Ruby J. Wright (1, 2), Claudia del P. Lagos, Luke J. M. Davies, Chris, Power, James W. Trayford, O. Ivy Wong ((1) ICRAR/UWA, (2) ASTRO 3D)

TL;DR
This study uses EAGLE simulations to analyze galaxy quenching timescales, revealing how different physical mechanisms and galaxy properties influence the transition from star-forming to passive states across various masses and redshifts.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of quenching timescales in simulations, linking them to physical processes and galaxy properties, with implications for interpreting observational data.
Findings
Low-mass centrals quench over ~4 Gyr due to stellar feedback.
Satellites quench faster (~2 Gyr) via ram pressure stripping.
Quenching timescales peak at intermediate stellar masses.
Abstract
We use the \eagle\ simulations to study the connection between the quenching timescale, , and the physical mechanisms that transform star-forming galaxies into passive galaxies. By quantifying in two complementary ways - as the time over which (i) galaxies traverse the green valley on the colour-mass diagram, or (ii) leave the main sequence of star formation and subsequently arrive on the passive cloud in specific star formation rate (SSFR)-mass space - we find that the distribution of high-mass centrals, low-mass centrals and satellites are divergent. In the low stellar mass regime where , centrals exhibit systematically longer quenching timescales than satellites (~Gyr compared to ~Gyr). Satellites with low stellar mass relative to their halo mass cause this disparity, with ram pressure…
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