The emergence of passive galaxies in the early Universe
P. Santini, M. Castellano, E. Merlin, A. Fontana, F. Fortuni, D., Kodra, B. Magnelli, N. Menci, A. Calabr\`o, C. C. Lovell, L. Pentericci, V., Testa, S. M. Wilkins

TL;DR
This study confirms the presence and tracks the evolution of passive galaxies at high redshifts (z>3), revealing their increasing abundance over time and providing insights into their formation mechanisms in the early Universe.
Contribution
It offers a validated, statistically robust analysis of the stellar mass function of early passive galaxies and compares observations with theoretical models.
Findings
Confirmed at least 61% of candidates as passive using ALMA data.
Observed a significant evolution in the stellar mass function around z~4.
Predicted higher densities of passive galaxies in future surveys.
Abstract
The emergence of passive galaxies in the early Universe results from the interplay among the processes responsible for their rapid assembly and for the abrupt shut-down of their SF. Investigating the individual properties and demographics of early passive galaxies will improve our understanding of these mechanisms. In this work we present a follow-up analysis of the z>3 passive galaxy candidates selected by Merlin et al. (2019) in the CANDELS fields. We begin by first confirming the accuracy of their passive classification by exploiting their sub-mm emission to demonstrate the lack of ongoing SF. Using archival ALMA observations we are able to confirm at least 61% of the observed candidates as passive. While the remainder lack sufficiently deep data for confirmation, we are able to validate the entire sample in a statistical sense. We then estimate the Stellar Mass Function (SMF) of all…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
