Compact Star-Forming Galaxies as Old Starbursts Becoming Quiescent
C. G\'omez-Guijarro, G. E. Magdis, F. Valentino, S. Toft, A. W. S., Man, R. J. Ivison, K. Tisani\'c, D. van der Vlugt, M. Stockmann, S., Martin-Alvarez, G. Brammer

TL;DR
This study investigates optically-compact star-forming galaxies, proposing they are old starbursts transitioning to quiescence, based on their structural and star formation properties.
Contribution
It provides evidence that compact SFGs are likely old starbursts, offering insights into their formation, evolution, and role in galaxy quenching processes.
Findings
Compact SFGs show similar star formation efficiencies to extended SFGs.
Compact SFGs resemble upper-envelope main sequence galaxies in ISM diagnostics.
Radio emission indicates some compact SFGs are old starbursts.
Abstract
Optically-compact star-forming galaxies (SFGs) have been proposed as immediate progenitors of quiescent galaxies, although their origin and nature are debated. Were they formed in slow secular processes or in rapid merger-driven starbursts? Addressing this question would provide fundamental insight into how quenching occurs. We explore the location of the general population of galaxies with respect to fundamental star-forming and structural relations, identify compact SFGs based on their stellar core densities, and study three diagnostics of the burstiness of star formation: 1) Star formation efficiency, 2) interstellar medium (ISM), and 3) radio emission. The overall distribution of galaxies in the fundamental relations points towards a smooth transition towards quiescence while galaxies grow their stellar cores, although some galaxies suddenly increase their specific star-formation…
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