Resolved Molecular Gas Observations of MaNGA Post-starbursts Reveal a Tumultuous Past
Justin Atsushi Otter, Kate Rowlands, Katherine Alatalo, Ho-Hin Leung,, Vivienne Wild, Yuanze Luo, Andreea O. Petric, Elizaveta Sazonova, David V., Stark, Timothy Heckman, Timothy A. Davis, Sara Ellison, K. Decker French,, William Baker, Asa F. L. Bluck, Lauranne Lanz, Lihwai Lin

TL;DR
This study investigates the molecular gas properties of post-starburst galaxies using MaNGA and ALMA data, revealing that most have disturbed, centrally concentrated gas likely due to mergers or other processes, affecting star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spatially resolved analysis of molecular gas in MaNGA post-starbursts, linking gas dynamics to recent merger activity and star formation suppression.
Findings
Most PSBs show disturbed stellar kinematics indicating recent mergers.
Molecular gas in PSBs is compact, highly disturbed, and centrally concentrated.
Star-formation efficiency is suppressed despite high gas fractions.
Abstract
Post-starburst galaxies (PSBs) have recently and rapidly quenched their star-formation, thus they are an important way to understand how galaxies transition from star-forming late-types to quiescent early-types. The recent discovery of large cold gas reservoirs in PSBs calls into question the theory that galaxies must lose their gas to become quiescent. Optical Integral Field Spectroscopy (IFS) surveys have revealed two classes of PSBs: central PSBs with central quenching regions and ring PSBs with quenching in their outskirts. We analyze a sample of 13 nearby (z < 0.1) PSBs with spatially resolved optical IFS data from the Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory (MaNGA) survey and matched resolution Atacama Large (sub-)Millimeter Array (ALMA) observations of CO(1-0). Disturbed stellar kinematics in 7/13 of our PSBs and centrally concentrated molecular gas is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
