Stars, gas, and star formation of distant post-starburst galaxies
Po-Feng Wu, Rachel Bezanson, Francesco D'Eugenio, Anna R. Gallazzi,, Jenny E. Greene, Michael V. Maseda, Katherine A. Suess, and Arjen van der Wel

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties of distant post-starburst galaxies, revealing that their star formation was recently quenched likely due to galaxy interactions, with low star-forming efficiency and complex gas and stellar histories.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-wavelength analysis of five massive post-starburst galaxies at z~0.7, combining optical, ALMA, and radio data to understand their star formation and quenching processes.
Findings
Star formation was recently burst and then rapidly declined.
Galaxy interactions are linked to quenching in these galaxies.
Star-forming efficiency is low, and IR/radio estimates can overstate true rates.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive multi-wavelength study of 5 poststarburst galaxies with at , examining their stars, gas, and current and past star-formation activities. Using optical images from the Subaru telescope and Hubble Space Telescope, we observe a high incidence of companion galaxies and low surface brightness tidal features, indicating that quenching is closely related to interactions between galaxies. From optical spectra provided by the LEGA-C survey, we model the stellar continuum to derive the star-formation histories and show that the stellar masses of progenitors ranging from to , undergoing a burst of star formation several hundred million years prior to observation, with a decay time scale of million years. Our ALMA observations detect CO(2-1) emission in four galaxies, with the molecular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
