Molecular Gas Reservoirs in Massive Quiescent Galaxies at $\mathrm{z\sim0.7}$ Linked to Late Time Star Formation
Charity Woodrum, Christina C. Williams, Marcia Rieke, Joel Leja,, Benjamin D. Johnson, Rachel Bezanson, Robert Kennicutt, Justin Spilker,, Sandro Tacchella

TL;DR
This study investigates the molecular gas content in massive quiescent galaxies at z~0.7, linking recent star formation bursts to gas accretion events, and highlighting the importance of detailed star formation history modeling.
Contribution
It reveals that recent star formation bursts are associated with molecular gas reservoirs, likely due to gas-rich minor mergers, providing new insights into galaxy evolution at intermediate redshifts.
Findings
Half of the galaxies have detectable molecular gas.
Recent star formation bursts correlate with gas presence.
Gas likely acquired through minor mergers, not leftover from earlier epochs.
Abstract
We explore how the presence of detectable molecular gas depends on the inferred star formation histories (SFHs) in 8 massive, quiescent galaxies at . Half of the sample have clear detections of molecular gas, traced by CO(2-1). We find that the molecular gas content is unrelated to the rate of star formation decline prior to the most recent 1 Gyr, suggesting that the gas reservoirs are not leftover from their primary star formation epoch. However, the recent SFHs of CO-detected galaxies demonstrate evidence for secondary bursts of star formation in their last Gyr. The fraction of stellar mass formed in these secondary bursts ranges from , and ended between ago. The CO-detected galaxies form a higher fraction of mass in the last Gyr () compared to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Phase Equilibria and Thermodynamics · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
