An Extremely Massive Quiescent Galaxy at z=3.493: Evidence of Insufficiently Rapid Quenching Mechanisms in Theoretical Models

Forrest B.; Annunziatella M.; Wilson G.; Marchesini D.; Muzzin A.; Cooper M.C.; Marsan Z.C.; McConachie I.; Chan J.C.C.; Gomez P.; Kado-Fong E.; Barbera F.L.; Labbé I.; Lange-Vagle D.; Nantais J.; et. al.

Abstract

We present spectra of the most massive quiescent galaxy yet spectroscopically confirmed at z > 3, verified via the detection of Balmer absorption features in the H- and K-bands of Keck/ MOSFIRE. The spectra confirm a galaxy with no significant ongoing star formation, consistent with the lack of rest-frame UV flux and overall photometric spectral energy distribution. With a stellar mass of 3.1(-0.2)(+0.1) x 10 M-circle dot at z = 3.493, this galaxy is nearly three times more massive than the highest redshift spectroscopically confirmed absorption-line-identified galaxy known. The star formation history of this quiescent galaxy implies that it formed >1000 M-circle dot yr(-1) for almost 0.5 Gyr beginning at z similar to 7.2, strongly suggestive that it is the descendant of massive dusty star-forming galaxies at 5 < z < 7 recently observed with ALMA. While galaxies with similarly extreme stellar masses are reproduced in some simulations at early times, such a lack of ongoing star formation is not seen there. This suggests the need for a quenching process that either starts earlier or is more rapid than that currently prescribed, challenging our current understanding of how ultra-massive galaxies form and evolve in the early universe.

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Título según WOS: An Extremely Massive Quiescent Galaxy at z=3.493: Evidence of Insufficiently Rapid Quenching Mechanisms in Theoretical Models
Título según SCOPUS: An Extremely Massive Quiescent Galaxy at z = 3.493: Evidence of Insufficiently Rapid Quenching Mechanisms in Theoretical Models
Título de la Revista: ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volumen: 890
Número: 1
Editorial: IOP PUBLISHING LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2020
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.3847/2041-8213/AB5B9F

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS