Investigating the role of bars in quenching star formation using spatially resolved UV-optical colour maps
D. Renu, Smitha Subramanian, Suhasini Rao, and Koshy George

TL;DR
This study investigates how stellar bars in disc galaxies influence the suppression of star formation, revealing that bars can lead to older stellar populations in the inner regions and contribute to galaxy quenching.
Contribution
It provides spatially resolved UV-optical colour maps of barred galaxies, demonstrating the role of bars in quenching star formation and distinguishing effects from bulges and unbarred galaxies.
Findings
Barred galaxies show redder inner regions indicating older stellar populations.
Bars extend the quenching effect to larger spatial regions compared to unbarred galaxies.
Most barred galaxies host pseudo bulges and lack AGN, suggesting bars drive internal quenching.
Abstract
Bars are ubiquitously found in disc galaxies and are known to drive galaxy evolution through secular processes. However, the specific contribution of bars in suppression of star formation (SF) is still under inspection which we investigate in this paper using spatially resolved UV-optical colour maps & radial color profiles of a sample of 17 centrally quenched (CQ) barred galaxies in redshift range 0.02-0.06. The sample is selected based on their location in M - SFR plane. They are classified as passive based on parameters from MPA-JHU VAC, but non-passive based on the GSWLC catalog, indicating a passive inner region & recent star formation in their extended disc. We use archival SDSS r-band and GALEX FUV & NUV imaging data and created spatially resolved (FUV-NUV vs NUV-r) colour maps to understand the nature of UV emission from different regions of these galaxies. We then…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
