The role of stochastic and smooth processes in regulating galaxy quenching
Rain Kipper, Antti Tamm, Elmo Tempel, Roberto de Propris, Punyakoti, Ganeshaiah Veena

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytical model to quantify the roles of mass quenching, gas stripping, and mergers in galaxy evolution, revealing that fast processes like ram pressure stripping dominate star formation cessation, with a typical quenching timescale of 1.2 Gyr.
Contribution
It introduces a likelihood-maximized analytical framework to disentangle and quantify the contributions of different quenching mechanisms in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Quenching timescale is approximately 1.2 Gyr.
Ram pressure stripping occurs more frequently than mergers.
Fast quenching mechanisms account for most star formation loss.
Abstract
Galaxies can be classified as passive ellipticals or star-forming discs. Ellipticals dominate at the high end of the mass range, and therefore there must be a mechanism responsible for the quenching of star-forming galaxies. This could either be due to the secular processes linked to the mass and star formation of galaxies or to external processes linked to the surrounding environment. In this paper, we analytically model the processes that govern galaxy evolution and quantify their contribution. We have specifically studied the effects of mass quenching, gas stripping, and mergers on galaxy quenching. To achieve this, we first assumed a set of differential equations that describe the processes that shape galaxy evolution. We then modelled the parameters of these equations by maximising likelihood. These equations describe the evolution of galaxies individually, but the parameters of…
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