The GOGREEN Survey: Constraining the Satellite Quenching Timescale in Massive Clusters at $\boldsymbol{z} \gtrsim 1$
Devontae Baxter, Michael Cooper, Michael Balogh, Tim Carleton,, Pierluigi Cerulo, Gabriella De Lucia, Ricardo Demarco, Sean McGee, Adam, Muzzin, Julie Nantais, Irene Pintos Castro, Andrew Reeves, Gregory Rudnick,, Florian Sarron, Remco van der Burg, Benedetta Vulcani

TL;DR
This study models satellite galaxy quenching in massive clusters at redshift around 1, revealing a mass-dependent quenching timescale that supports starvation as the primary quenching mechanism at intermediate redshifts.
Contribution
It introduces a mass-dependent satellite quenching timescale model at z~1, contrasting with previous studies that suggested a mass-independent timescale.
Findings
Quenching timescale decreases from ~1.6 Gyr at 10^10 M_sun to ~0.6-1 Gyr at 10^11 M_sun.
Starvation likely dominates environmental quenching at z<2.
Most ultra-massive satellites are quenched before infall.
Abstract
We model satellite quenching at by combining massive () clusters at from the GOGREEN and GCLASS surveys with accretion histories of redshift-matched analogs from the IllustrisTNG simulation. Our fiducial model, which is parameterized by the satellite quenching timescale (), accounts for quenching in our simulated satellite population both at the time of infall by using the observed coeval field quenched fraction and after infall by tuning to reproduce the observed satellite quenched fraction versus stellar mass trend. This model successfully reproduces the observed satellite quenched fraction as a function of stellar mass (by construction), projected cluster-centric radius, and redshift and is consistent with the observed field and cluster stellar mass…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
