A low [CII]/[NII] ratio in the center of a massive galaxy at z=3.7: witnessing the transition to quiescence at high-redshift?
C. Schreiber, K. Glazebrook, C. Papovich, T. Diaz-Santos, A. Verma, D., Elbaz, G. G. Kacprzak, T. Nanayakkara, P. Oesch, M. Pannella, L. Spitler, C., Straatman, K.-V. Tran, T. Wang

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations of specific far-infrared emission lines to investigate the quenching process in a high-redshift galaxy, Hyde, revealing inside-out quenching and a transition phase before full quiescence.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of [CII] and [NII] emissions in Hyde, offering new insights into the quenching process at high redshift.
Findings
[CII] emission dominated by ionized gas in the center
Star formation rate constrained to ~50 Msun/yr, ruling out full quenching
Evidence supports inside-out quenching starting before gas depletion
Abstract
Understanding the process of quenching is one of the major open questions in galaxy evolution, and crucial insights may be obtained by studying quenched galaxies at high redshifts, at epochs when the Universe and the galaxies were younger and simpler to model. However, establishing the degree of quiescence in high redshift galaxies is a challenging task. One notable example is Hyde, a recently discovered galaxy at z=3.709. As compact (r~0.5 kpc) and massive (M*~1e11 Msun) as its quenched neighbor Jekyll, it is also extremely obscured yet only moderately luminous in the sub-millimeter. Panchromatic modeling suggested it could be the first galaxy found in transition to quenching at z>3, however the data were also consistent with a broad range of star-formation activity, including moderate SFR in the lower scatter of the galaxy main-sequence (MS). Here, we describe ALMA observations of the…
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.
