On the formation of massive quiescent galaxies with diverse morphologies in the TNG50 simulation
Minjung Park, Sandro Tacchella, Erica J. Nelson, Lars Hernquist,, Rainer Weinberger, Benedikt Diemer, Dylan Nelson, Annalisa Pillepich,, Federico Marinacci, and Mark Vogelsberger

TL;DR
This study uses the TNG50 simulation to investigate how massive galaxies quench their star formation and evolve morphologically, revealing diverse pathways and the decoupling of quenching from morphological changes.
Contribution
It demonstrates the roles of black hole feedback, mergers, and environment in shaping galaxy quenching and morphology, highlighting the diversity of evolutionary pathways.
Findings
Quenching is faster for satellite galaxies in massive halos.
Quiescent discs are mainly recently and slowly quenched disc galaxies.
Half of the quiescent ellipticals are rapidly quenched at higher redshifts while still disc-like.
Abstract
Observations have shown that the star-formation activity and the morphology of galaxies are closely related, but the underlying physical connection is not well understood. Using the TNG50 simulation, we explore the quenching and the morphological evolution of the 102 massive quiescent galaxies in the mass range of selected at . The morphology of galaxies is quantified based on their kinematics, and we measure the quenching timescale of individual galaxies directly from star formation history. We show that galaxies tend to be quenched more rapidly if they: (i) are satellites in massive halos, (ii) have lower star-forming gas fractions, or (iii) inject a larger amount of black hole kinetic feedback energy. By following the global evolutionary pathways, we conclude that quiescent discs are mainly disc galaxies that are recently and slowly…
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