From starburst to quiescence: post-starburst galaxies and their large-scale clustering over cosmic time
Aaron Wilkinson, Omar Almaini, Vivienne Wild, David Maltby, William G., Hartley, Chris Simpson, Kate Rowlands

TL;DR
This study investigates the large-scale clustering of post-starburst galaxies across cosmic time, revealing their environmental dependence and evolutionary links to dusty starburst galaxies, with implications for galaxy quenching mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first high-redshift clustering analysis of PSB galaxies using a large photometric sample, highlighting their environmental preferences and evolutionary connections.
Findings
Low-redshift PSBs in massive halos suggest satellite infall in clusters.
High-redshift PSBs reside in increasingly massive halos, indicating halo downsizing.
Clustering supports evolution from dusty starbursts to quiescent galaxies.
Abstract
We present the first study of the large-scale clustering of post-starburst (PSB) galaxies in the high redshift Universe (). We select PSB galaxies photometrically, the largest high-redshift sample of this kind, from two deep large-scale near-infrared surveys: the UKIDSS Ultra Deep Survey (UDS) DR11 and the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS). Using angular cross-correlation techniques, we estimate the halo masses for this large sample of PSB galaxies and compare them with quiescent and star-forming galaxies selected in the same fields. We find that low-mass, low-redshift () PSB galaxies preferentially reside in very high-mass dark matter halos (MM), suggesting they are likely to be infalling satellite galaxies in cluster-like environments. High-mass PSB galaxies are more weakly clustered at low redshifts, but they reside in…
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