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Evidence for mature bulges and an inside-out quenching phase 3 billion years after the Big Bang

Author(s)
Tacchella, SandroCarollo, C. M.Renzini, A.Schreiber, N. M. FoersterLang, P.Wuyts, S.Cresci, G.Dekel, A.Genzel, R.Lilly, S. J.Mancini, C.Newman, S.Onodera, M.Shapley, A.Tacconi, L.Woo, J.Zamorani, G.
Issued Date
2015-04
DOI
10.1126/science.1261094
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/53279
Citation
SCIENCE, v.348, no.6232, pp.314 - 317
Abstract
Most present-day galaxies with stellar masses >= 10(11) solar masses show no ongoing star formation and are dense spheroids. Ten billion years ago, similarly massive galaxies were typically forming stars at rates of hundreds solar masses per year. It is debated how star formation ceased, on which time scales, and how this "quenching" relates to the emergence of dense spheroids. We measured stellar mass and star-formation rate surface density distributions in star-forming galaxies at redshift 2.2 with similar to 1-kiloparsec resolution. We find that, in the most massive galaxies, star formation is quenched from the inside out, on time scales less than 1 billion years in the inner regions, up to a few billion years in the outer disks. These galaxies sustain high star-formation activity at large radii, while hosting fully grown and already quenched bulges in their cores.
Publisher
AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
ISSN
0036-8075
Keyword
EARLY-TYPE GALAXIESSIMILAR-TO 2SINS/ZC-SINF SURVEYSTAR-FORMING GALAXIESSTELLAR MASS DENSITYDISK GALAXIESKINEMATICS EVIDENCEMERGER REMNANTSBLACK-HOLESDEEP FIELD

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