Evidence for galaxy quenching in the green valley caused by a lack of a circumgalactic medium
Glenn G. Kacprzak, Nikole M. Nielsen, Hasti Nateghi, Christopher W., Churchill, Stephanie K. Pointon, Themiya Nanayakkara, Sowgat Muzahid, Jane C., Charlton

TL;DR
This study presents a rare case of a galaxy in the green valley lacking a detectable circumgalactic medium, suggesting quenching due to fuel depletion and providing insights into galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed observation of a green valley galaxy without a detectable CGM, linking CGM absence to galaxy quenching mechanisms.
Findings
G1547 has no detectable CGM absorption despite proximity to a background quasar.
Galaxies with low SSFR generally lack detectable HI in their CGM.
G1547's properties suggest quenching due to lack of accreting fuel, with an estimated timescale of 4 Gyr.
Abstract
The relationship between a galaxy's properties and its circumgalactic medium (CGM) provides a unique view of how galaxies evolve. We present an interesting edge-on (i=86 degrees) disk galaxy (G1547) where the CGM is probed by a background quasar at a distance of 84 kpc and within 10 degrees of the galaxy major axis. G1547 does not have any detectable CGM absorption down to stringent limits, covering HI (EW<0.02A, log(N(HI)/cm)<12.6) and a range of low and high ionisation absorption lines (OI, CII, NII, SiII, CIII, NIII, SiIII, CIV, SiIV, NV and OVI). This system is rare, given the covering fraction of for sub-L* galaxies within 50-100 kpc of quasar sightlines. G1547 has a low SFR (1.1 Myr), SSFR (yr) and (0.06 Myrkpc) and does not exhibit AGN or star-formation driven…
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