The merger fraction of post-starburst galaxies in UNIONS
Scott Wilkinson, Sara L. Ellison, Connor Bottrell, Robert W. Bickley,, Stephen Gwyn, Jean-Charles Cuillandre, Vivienne Wild

TL;DR
This study investigates the role of galaxy mergers in triggering post-starburst galaxies by analyzing a large dataset with multiple classification methods, finding mergers are significant but not the sole cause.
Contribution
It provides the largest and most comprehensive assessment of the merger fraction in post-starburst galaxies using diverse classification techniques.
Findings
Merger fraction in PSBs ranges from 19% to 42%.
Merger fraction is 3-46 times higher than in control samples.
Approximately 70% of recent post-mergers are undetected by current metrics.
Abstract
Post-starburst (PSB) galaxies are defined as having experienced a recent burst of star formation, followed by a prompt truncation in further activity. Identifying the mechanism(s) causing a galaxy to experience a post-starburst phase therefore provides integral insight into the causes of rapid quenching. Galaxy mergers have long been proposed as a possible post-starburst trigger. Effectively testing this hypothesis requires a large spectroscopic galaxy survey to identify the rare PSBs as well as high quality imaging and robust morphology metrics to identify mergers. We bring together these critical elements by selecting PSBs from the overlap of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the Canada-France Imaging Survey and applying a suite of classification methods: non-parametric morphology metrics such as asymmetry and Gini-M20, a convolutional neural network trained to identify post-merger…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Vision and Imaging
