ArXiv TLDR

Morphological and Star Formation Properties of Cosmic Noon Massive Quiescent Galaxies

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2605.02493

Vaidik Prasal, Yogesh Wadadekar, Pralay Biswas, Rashi Jain

astro-ph.GA

TLDR

This paper analyzes massive quiescent galaxies at cosmic noon, finding them to be bulge-dominated with inside-out quenching, suggesting AGN feedback.

Key contributions

  • Massive quiescent galaxies at cosmic noon are bulge-dominated (median Sérsic index n~4), consistent with S0s.
  • Spatially resolved SEDs reveal ~79% of galaxies exhibit inside-out quenching with positive radial sSFR gradients.
  • Inner regions formed ~0.5 Gyr earlier and quenched more rapidly than outer regions, confirming inside-out growth.
  • Compact galaxies with possible AGN activity suggest AGN feedback and morphological quenching roles.

Why it matters

This study provides direct evidence for inside-out quenching in massive galaxies at cosmic noon, linking their bulge-dominated morphology to quiescence. It offers crucial insights into the mechanisms, like AGN feedback, driving star formation cessation in the early universe.

Original Abstract

We analyze the star formation and morphological properties of massive quiescent galaxies at cosmic noon ($2 < z < 3$) in the Abell 2744 field, using deep JWST NIRCam broad-band and medium-band imaging from the UNCOVER Treasury program and the MegaScience survey, complemented by archival HST data. Using BAGPIPES SED modeling, we select 14 unique massive quiescent galaxies ($M_* \gtrsim 10^{10}$ M$_\odot$, $\mathrm{sSFR} < 0.2/t_\mathrm{age}$). Morphological analysis with statmorph and pysersic reveals that most galaxies are intermediate type or S0s with a median Sérsic index $n \sim 4$, consistent with bulge-dominated systems. This value remains constant over $z \sim 1.5$--$4$, indicating that the morphology of massive galaxies is linked to their quiescence since at least $z \sim 4$. Spatially resolved SED modeling with piXedfit shows that $\sim 79\%$ of galaxies exhibit positive radial sSFR gradients, providing direct evidence for inside-out quenching, with the mean sSFR increasing by $\sim2$ dex from $R/R_e = 0.5$ to $4.5$. Formation time ($t_{50}$) profiles confirm that inner regions formed $\approx 0.5$ Gyr earlier, on average, than the outer regions, and quenching timescale profiles show that the cores were quenched more rapidly than the outskirts. Some galaxies show weak indications of possible AGN activity. Most galaxies are compact, with a mean half-mass radius of $R_e = 1.95 \pm 0.13$ kpc. The observed inside-out quenching pattern and possible AGN signatures are consistent with AGN feedback playing a role in star formation cessation, while the bulge-dominated morphologies suggest morphological quenching may also contribute.

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