INSPIRE: INvestigating Stellar Population In RElics -- I. Survey presentation and pilot program
C. Spiniello, C. Tortora, G. D'Ago, L. Coccato, F. La Barbera, A., Ferr\'e-Mateu, N. R. Napolitano, M. Spavone, D. Scognamiglio, M. Arnaboldi,, A. Gallazzi, L. Hunt, S. Moehler, M. Radovich, and S. Zibetti

TL;DR
The INSPIRE project aims to spectroscopically confirm and characterize relic galaxies at low redshift, providing insights into galaxy formation and evolution by analyzing their stellar populations and structural properties.
Contribution
This study introduces the INSPIRE survey and presents initial spectroscopic results confirming two relic galaxy candidates from a pilot program.
Findings
Two galaxies confirmed as relics with high velocity dispersion and old stellar populations.
One galaxy shows a more extended star formation history, not classified as a relic.
Spectroscopic analysis effectively identifies relic candidates based on stellar properties.
Abstract
Massive ETGs are thought to form through a two-phase process. At early times, an intense and fast starburst forms blue and disk-dominated galaxies. After quenching, the remaining structures become red, compact and massive, i.e., 'red nuggets'. Then, a time-extended second phase which is dominated by mergers, causes structural evolution and size growth. Given the stochastic nature of mergers, a small fraction of red nuggets survives, without any interaction, massive and compact until today: relic galaxies. Since this fraction depends on the processes dominating the size growth, counting relics at low-z is a valuable way to disentangle between different galaxy evolution models. In this paper, we introduce the INvestigating Stellar Population In RElics (INSPIRE) Project, that aims at spectroscopically confirming and fully characterizing a large number of relics at 0.1<z<0.5. We focus here…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Technology and Applications
