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Publication Details
AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS
SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH
earth and planetary sciences
Inferring the star formation histories of massive quiescent galaxies with BAGPIPES: Evidence for multiple quenching mechanisms
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 480, No. 4, Year 2018
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Description
We present Bayesian Analysis of Galaxies for Physical Inference and Parameter EStimation, or BAGPIPES, a new PYTHON tool that can be used to rapidly generate complex model galaxy spectra and to fit these to arbitrary combinations of spectroscopic and photometric data using the MULTINEST nested sampling algorithm. We extensively test our ability to recover realistic star formation histories (SFHs) by fitting mock observations of quiescent galaxies from the MUFASA simulation. We then perform a detailed analysis of the SFHs of a sample of 9289 quiescent galaxies from UltraVISTA with stellar masses, M* > 1010M⊙ and redshifts 0.25 < z < 3.75. Themajority of our sample exhibit SFHs that rise gradually then quench relatively rapidly over 1-2 Gyr. This behaviour is consistent with recent cosmological hydrodynamic simulations, where AGN-driven feedback in the low-accretion (jet) mode is the dominant quenching mechanism. At z > 1, we also find a class of objects with SFHs that rise and fall very rapidly, with quenching time-scales of < 1 Gyr, consistent with quasar-mode AGN feedback. Finally, at z < 1 we find a population with SFHs which quench more slowly than they rise, over > 3 Gyr, which we speculate to be the result of diminishing overall cosmic gas supply. We confirm the mass-accelerated evolution (downsizing) trend, and a trend towards more rapid quenching at higher stellar masses. However, our results suggest that the latter is a natural consequence of mass-accelerated evolution, rather than a change in quenching physics with stellar mass. We find 61 ± 8 per cent of z > 1.5 massive-quenched galaxies undergo significant further evolution by z = 0.5. BAGPIPES is available at bagpipes.readthedocs.io. © 2018 The Author(s).
Authors & Co-Authors
Carnall, Adam C.
United Kingdom, Edinburgh
The University of Edinburgh
Mclure, Ross J.
United Kingdom, Edinburgh
The University of Edinburgh
James S. Dunlop, James S.
United Kingdom, Edinburgh
The University of Edinburgh
Dav́e, Romeel
United Kingdom, Edinburgh
The University of Edinburgh
Statistics
Citations: 260
Authors: 4
Affiliations: 1
Identifiers
Doi:
10.1093/MNRAS/STY2169
ISSN:
00358711
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study