Where Galaxies Go to Die: The Environments of Massive Quiescent Galaxies at $3<z<5$
Ian McConachie, Anna de Graaff, Michael V. Maseda, Joel Leja, Yunchong Zhang, David J. Setton, Rachel Bezanson, Leindert A. Boogaard, Gabriel Brammer, Nikko J. Cleri, Olivia R. Cooper, Karl Glazebrook, Rashmi Gottumukkala, Jenny E. Greene, Andy D. Goulding, Michaela Hirschmann

TL;DR
This study uses JWST spectroscopy to investigate the environments of massive quiescent galaxies at redshifts 3 to 5, revealing their preference for dense regions and highlighting the role of mergers in their mass assembly.
Contribution
It provides the first spectroscopic evidence linking high-redshift massive quiescent galaxies to dense environments and explores their formation history in relation to galaxy assembly processes.
Findings
Massive quiescent galaxies are preferentially located in overdense peaks.
Approximately 50% of MQGs are found in massive peaks, higher than star-forming galaxies.
Mass assembly of MQGs involves mergers and ex-situ star formation.
Abstract
At low redshift, massive quiescent galaxies (MQGs) are most frequently found in massive, rich galaxy clusters, but at high redshift the trend is less clear. Here, we present spectroscopic evidence of the effects of environment on the formation and assembly of high-redshift MQGs. We identify 25 (5) () spectroscopically-confirmed quiescent galaxies in the UDS and EGS fields at with NIRSpec PRISM spectroscopy from RUBIES and other public JWST NIRSpec programs. We measure the density contrast in these fields by applying a Monte Carlo Voronoi Tesselation density mapping technique to photometric and spectroscopic redshifts of sources. We robustly detect 12 massive overdense peaks with and six extended massive protoclusters ($\log…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
