ArXiv TLDR

Quiescent fractions in high-redshift galaxy groups reflect their hot-or-cold state of gas accretion

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2604.22401

Guillaume Elias, Emanuele Daddi, Chiara D'Eugenio, David Elbaz, Maximilien Franco + 13 more

astro-ph.GA

TLDR

High-redshift galaxy groups show quiescent fractions linked to hot vs. cold gas accretion, suggesting environment drives galaxy quenching.

Key contributions

  • Quiescent fractions reach ~50% in hot-accreting groups, but are near zero in cold-accreting groups.
  • Massive quiescent galaxies in hot-accreting groups are concentrated in their inner regions.
  • High-redshift groups are actively assembling, lacking a single dominant brightest group galaxy.
  • Stellar mass of the dominant galaxy does not predict the group's quiescent fraction.

Why it matters

This study links the thermal state of gas accretion to galaxy quiescence in high-redshift groups. It suggests the cold-to-hot gas transition drives quenching, possibly via inside-out starvation. The findings emphasize environment's greater role over internal processes in shaping these early galaxy populations.

Original Abstract

Cold accretion and quenching are closely related aspects of galaxy evolution, as sustained gas supply is required to maintain star formation. High-redshift galaxy groups therefore provide a valuable laboratory for testing how the thermal state of accreting gas relates to the emergence of quiescence. We measure quiescent fractions in a sample of 16 spectroscopically confirmed galaxy groups at $1.6<z<3.6$, spanning halo masses from $10^{12.8},{\rm M_\odot}$ to $10^{13.9},{\rm M_\odot}$, by fitting the SEDs of candidate member galaxies selected from the COSMOS2020 catalog and using a membership-probability approach to estimate group quiescent fractions. We compare these quiescent fractions to the expected cold or hot accretion state of each halo and find evidence for a correlation: quiescent fractions reach about 50 percent in groups in the hot-accretion regime and are consistent with zero in groups in the cold-accretion regime. In mature hot-accreting groups, massive quiescent galaxies are preferentially found in the inner regions ($R<0.5R_{\rm vir}$), with a 4.4-sigma excess relative to the outskirts. Most groups lack a clearly established brightest group galaxy and instead show small stellar-mass gaps, typically $M_{*,1}/M_{*,2}<3$, indicating that they remain in an active assembly phase rather than being dynamically evolved systems. Consistently, the stellar-mass excess of the dominant galaxy, measured relative to the SHMR expectation, does not predict the group quiescent fraction. Taken together, our results support a picture in which the cold-to-hot transition in gas accretion contributes to the onset of quiescence, possibly through inside-out starvation associated with filament disruption in shock-heated intra-group gas, and suggest that environment plays a greater role than internal processes in shaping the quiescent galaxy population in these structures.

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