Color gradients along the quiescent galaxy sequence: clues to quenching and structural growth
Katherine A. Suess, Mariska Kriek, Sedona H. Price, Guillermo Barro

TL;DR
This study investigates how the sizes, structures, and color gradients of quiescent galaxies evolve between redshifts 1 and 2.5, revealing insights into quenching processes and inside-out growth mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides new evidence that color gradients correlate with galaxy age and supports inside-out growth through minor mergers as a key quenching pathway.
Findings
Younger quiescent galaxies are not smaller than older ones at fixed mass.
Older galaxies exhibit stronger negative color gradients.
Central mass density remains constant with age, but outer mass increases.
Abstract
This Letter examines how the sizes, structures, and color gradients of galaxies change along the quiescent sequence. Our sample consists of ~400 quiescent galaxies at and in three CANDELS fields. We exploit deep multi-band HST imaging to derive accurate mass profiles and color gradients, then use an empirical calibration from rest-frame UVJ colors to estimate galaxy ages. We find that -- contrary to previous results -- the youngest quiescent galaxies are not significantly smaller than older quiescent galaxies at fixed stellar mass. These `post-starburst' galaxies only appear smaller in half-light radii because they have systematically flatter color gradients. The strength of color gradients in quiescent galaxies is a clear function of age, with older galaxies exhibiting stronger negative color gradients (i.e., redder centers).…
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