The colors and sizes of recently quenched galaxies: a result of compact starburst before quenching
Po-Feng Wu, Arjen van der Wel, Rachel Bezanson, Anna Gallazzi, Camilla, Pacifici, Caroline M. S. Straatman, Ivana Barisic, Eric F. Bell, Priscilla, Chauke, Francesco D'Eugenio, Marijn Franx, Adam Muzzin, David Sobral, Josha, van Houdt

TL;DR
This study investigates the sizes and colors of recently quenched galaxies at z~0.8, finding that compact starbursts before quenching explain their properties, with implications for galaxy evolution and formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides evidence that compact starburst events are common before galaxy quenching, linking galaxy properties to burst strength and suggesting merger-driven processes.
Findings
Bluer galaxies are smaller and have younger stellar ages.
Toy models with central starbursts reproduce observed size-color correlation.
Mergers may trigger rapid quenching in some galaxies.
Abstract
We analyze the colors and sizes of 32 quiescent (UVJ-selected) galaxies with strong Balmer absorption (\AA) at drawn from DR2 of the LEGA-C survey to test the hypothesis that these galaxies experienced compact, central starbursts before quenching. These recently quenched galaxies, usually referred to as post-starburst galaxies, span a wide range of colors and we find a clear correlation between color and half-light radius, such that bluer galaxies are smaller. We build simple toy models to explain this correlation: a normal star-forming disk plus a central, compact starburst component. Bursts with exponential decay timescale of ~100 Myr that produce to more than 100\% of the pre-existing masses can reproduce the observed correlation. More significant bursts also produce bluer and smaller descendants. Our findings imply that when…
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