A massive quiescent galaxy in a group environment at z=4.53
Abstract
We report on the spectroscopic confirmation of a massive quiescent galaxy at zspec=4.53 in the COSMOS field. The object was first identified as a galaxy with suppressed star formation at zphot4.65 from the COSMOS2020 catalog. The follow-up spectroscopy with Keck/MOSFIRE in the K-band reveals faint [OII] emission and the Balmer break, indicative of evolved stellar populations. We perform the spectral energy distribution fitting using photometry and spectrum to infer physical properties. The obtained stellar mass is high (M* 1010.8\,M) and the current star formation rate is more than 1 dex below that of main-sequence galaxies at z=4.5. Its star formation history suggests that this galaxy experienced rapid quenching from z 5. The galaxy is among the youngest quiescent galaxies confirmed so far at zspec>3 with zform5.2 (200\,Myr ago), which is the epoch when 50\% of total stellar mass was formed. A unique aspect of the galaxy is that it is in an extremely dense region; there are four massive star-forming galaxies at 4.4<zphot<4.7 located within 150 physical kpc from the galaxy. Interestingly, three of them have strongly overlapping virial radii with that of the central quiescent galaxy ( 70\,kpc), suggesting that the over-density region is likely the highest redshift candidate of a dense group with a spectroscopically confirmed quiescent galaxy at the center. The group provides us with a unique opportunity to gain insights into the role of the group environment for quenching at z5, which corresponds to the formation epoch of massive elliptical galaxies in the local Universe.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.