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The first quenched galaxies, when and how?

Authors :
Xie, Lizhi
De Lucia, Gabriella
Fontanot, Fabio
Hirschmann, Michaela
Bahé, Yannick M
Balogh, Michael L.
Muzzin, Adam
Vulcani, Benedetta
Baxter, Devontae C.
Forrest, Ben
Wilson, Gillian
Rudnick, Gregory H.
Cooper, M. C.
Rescigno, Umberto
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Many quiescent galaxies discovered in the early Universe by \textit{JWST} raise fundamental questions on when and how these galaxies became and stayed quenched. Making use of the latest version of the semi-analytic model GAEA that provides good agreement with the observed quenched fractions up to $z\sim 3$, we make predictions for the expected fractions of quiescent galaxies up to $z\sim 7$ and analyze the main quenching mechanism. We find that in a simulated box of $685~{\rm Mpc}$ on a side, the first quenched massive ($M_{\star} \sim 10^{11} {\rm M}_{\odot}$), Milky Way mass, and low mass ($M_{\star} \sim 10^{9.5} {\rm M}_{\odot}$ ) galaxies appear at $z\sim 4.5$, $z\sim 6.2$, and before $z = 7$. Most quenched galaxies identified at early redshifts remain quenched for more than 1 Gyr. Independently of galaxy stellar mass, the dominant quenching mechanism at high redshift is accretion disk feedback (quasar winds) from a central massive black hole, which is triggered by mergers in massive and MW-mass galaxies, and by disk instabilities in low-mass galaxies. Environmental stripping becomes increasingly more important at lower redshift.<br />Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Accepted publication in APJL

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2402.01314
Document Type :
Working Paper