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The origins of post-starburst galaxies at z <0.05

Authors :
Y. Zheng
Kate Rowlands
Noelia Jimenez
Natalia Lahén
Jairo Méndez-Abreu
W. Lucas
C. J. Walcher
Peter H. Johansson
M. M. Pawlik
L. Taj Aldeen
Vivienne Wild
Department of Physics
European Research Council
University of St Andrews. School of Physics and Astronomy
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Post-starburst galaxies can be identified via the presence of prominent Hydrogen Balmer absorption lines in their spectra. We present a comprehensive study of the origin of strong Balmer lines in a volume-limited sample of 189 galaxies with $0.019.5$ and projected axis ratio $b/a&gt;0.32$. We explore their structural properties, environments, emission lines and star formation histories, and compare them to control samples of star-forming and quiescent galaxies, and simulated galaxy mergers. Excluding contaminants, in which the strong Balmer lines are most likely caused by dust-star geometry, we find evidence for three different pathways through the post-starburst phase, with most events occurring in intermediate-density environments: (1) a significant disruptive event, such as a gas-rich major merger, causing a starburst and growth of a spheroidal component, followed by quenching of the star formation (70% of post-starburst galaxies at $9.510.5$); (2) at $9.510.5$, cyclic evolution of quiescent galaxies which gradually move towards the high-mass end of the red sequence through weak starbursts, possibly as a result of a merger with a smaller gas-rich companion (40%). Our analysis suggests that AGN are `on&#39; for $50%$ of the duration of the post-starburst phase, meaning that traditional samples of post-starburst galaxies with strict emission line cuts will be at least $50%$ incomplete due to the exclusion of narrow-line AGN.&lt;br /&gt;Comment: Accepted by MNRAS; 19 figures, 39 pages

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ca99287abceda8b5479238cc248d8ea2