Post-starburst galaxies in the centers of intermediate redshift clusters
Ariel Werle, Bianca Poggianti, Alessia Moretti, Callum Bellhouse,, Benedetta Vulcani, Marco Gullieuszik, Mario Radovich, Jacopo Fritz,, Alessandro Ignesti, Johan Richard, Genevi\`eve Soucail, Gustavo Bruzual,, Stephane Charlot, Matilde Mingozzi, Cecilia Bacchini, Neven Tomicic

TL;DR
This study uses spatially-resolved spectroscopy to analyze 21 post-starburst galaxies in intermediate-redshift clusters, revealing ram-pressure stripping as the primary quenching mechanism and highlighting the role of active galactic nuclei at high masses.
Contribution
It provides detailed spatially-resolved star-formation histories of post-starburst galaxies, linking quenching patterns to environmental effects like ram-pressure stripping and AGN activity.
Findings
Most galaxies quenched from outside-in or irregular patterns.
Ram-pressure stripping identified as main quenching driver.
Active galactic nuclei influence high-mass galaxy quenching.
Abstract
We present results from MUSE spatially-resolved spectroscopy of 21 post-starburst galaxies in the centers of 8 clusters from to . We measure spatially resolved star-formation histories (SFHs), the time since quenching () and the fraction of stellar mass assembled in the past 1.5 Gyr (). The SFHs display a clear enhancement of star-formation prior to quenching for 16 out of 21 objects, with at least 10% (and up to %) of the stellar mass being assembled in the past 1.5 Gyr and ranging from less than 100 Myrs to Myrs. By mapping and , we analyze the quenching patterns of the galaxies. Most galaxies in our sample have quenched their star-formation from the outside-in or show a side-to-side/irregular pattern, both consistent with quenching by ram-pressure stripping. Only three objects show an inside-out quenching…
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