Dynamical properties and star formation history of a low-mass quenched galaxy at Cosmic Noon
K. Ito, F. Valentino, W.M. Baker, G. Brammer, R. Gottumukkala, T. Kakimoto, C.D.P. Lagos, M. Onodera, A. Pensabene, G. Scarpe, M. Tanaka, K.E. Whitaker, N.A. Reddy, R.L. Sanders, and A.E. Shapley

TL;DR
This paper reports the spectroscopic confirmation and detailed analysis of a low-mass, quenched galaxy at redshift 2.08, revealing its dynamical properties, star formation history, and environment, providing new insights into galaxy quenching at Cosmic Noon.
Contribution
First detailed spectroscopic study of a low-mass quenched galaxy at high redshift, demonstrating JWST's capability to analyze such faint systems in detail.
Findings
Smallest stellar velocity dispersion among confirmed quiescent galaxies at z~2.
Half of the stellar mass formed ~1 Gyr before observation.
Galaxy is in a dense environment with potential environmental effects on quenching.
Abstract
We present the spectroscopic confirmation and in-depth analysis of AURORA-LQG1, a low-mass quiescent galaxy at with observed with medium-resolution JWST/NIRSpec spectroscopy. The deep medium-resolution spectrum enables the measurement of its stellar velocity dispersion (), the smallest value recorded among spectroscopically confirmed quiescent galaxies at . Coupled with a compact size (), it yields a dynamical mass estimate of . Its star formation history suggests that half of the stellar mass was in place before the observed epoch, with quenching occurring prior to . These results confirm that AURORA-LQG1 is genuinely quenched, rather than in a temporary phase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
