NIHAO XXVII: Crossing the green valley
Marvin Blank, Andrea V. Macci\`o, Xi Kang, Keri L. Dixon, Nadine H., Soliman

TL;DR
This study uses galaxy simulations to analyze the green valley transition, revealing that the crossing time is about 400 Myr, mainly driven by stellar aging and residual star formation, with implications for quenching mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the green valley crossing time and its independence from galaxy properties, using the NIHAO simulation suite.
Findings
Green valley crossing time is approximately 400 Myr.
Crossing time is mainly influenced by stellar aging and residual star formation.
Quenching mechanisms should operate on a timescale of about 500 Myr.
Abstract
The transition of high-mass galaxies from being blue and star forming to being red and dead is a crucial step in galaxy evolution, yet not fully understood. In this work, we use the NIHAO suite of galaxy simulations to investigate the relation between the transition time through the green valley and other galaxy properties. The typical green valley crossing time of our galaxies is approximately 400 Myr, somewhat shorter than observational estimates. The crossing of the green valley is triggered by the onset of AGN feedback and the subsequent shut down of star formation. Interestingly the time spent in the green valley is not related to any other galaxy properties, such as stellar age or metallicity, or the time at which the star formation quenching takes place. The crossing time is set by two main contributions: the ageing of the current stellar population and the residual star…
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