Quiescent galaxies 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang and their progenitors
Francesco Valentino (1, 2), Masayuki Tanaka (3, 4), Iary, Davidzon (1, 2), Sune Toft (1, 2), Carlos Gomez-Guijarro (1, 2, 5),, Mikkel Stockmann (1, 2), Masato Onodera (6, 7), Gabriel Brammer (1 and, 2), Daniel Ceverino (1, 2), Andreas L. Faisst (8), Anna Gallazzi (9),

TL;DR
This study confirms the existence of massive, quiescent galaxies at redshifts around 3.8, investigates their star formation histories, and explores their potential connection to sub-millimeter galaxies through observations and simulations.
Contribution
First spectroscopic confirmation of massive quiescent galaxies at z~3.8 and analysis of their star formation history and connection to SMGs using observations and simulations.
Findings
Confirmed quiescent galaxies at z~3.8 with stellar masses ~10^11 M_sun.
These galaxies experienced a brief, intense starburst 150-500 Myr before observation.
Comparison with simulations shows partial agreement with SMG populations at similar redshifts.
Abstract
We report two secure () and one tentative () spectroscopic confirmations of massive and quiescent galaxies through -band observations with Keck/MOSFIRE and VLT/X-Shooter. The stellar continuum emission, the absence of strong nebular emission lines and the lack of significant far-infrared detections confirm the passive nature of these objects, disfavoring the alternative solution of low-redshift dusty star-forming interlopers. We derive stellar masses of and ongoing star formation rates placing these galaxies dex below the main sequence at their redshifts. The adopted parametrization of the star formation history suggests that these sources experienced a strong () and short ( Myr) burst of star formation, peaking $\sim…
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