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

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...

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Veröffentlicht in:Astrophysical journal. Letters 2020-02, Vol.890 (1), p.L1
Hauptverfasser: Forrest, Ben, Annunziatella, Marianna, Wilson, Gillian, Marchesini, Danilo, Muzzin, Adam, Cooper, M. C., Marsan, Z. Cemile, McConachie, Ian, Chan, Jeffrey C. C., Gomez, Percy, Kado-Fong, Erin, Barbera, Francesco La, Labbé, Ivo, Lange-Vagle, Daniel, Nantais, Julie, Nonino, Mario, Peña, Theodore, Saracco, Paolo, Stefanon, Mauro, van der Burg, Remco F. J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung: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 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 ⊙ yr −1 for almost 0.5 Gyr beginning at z  ∼ 7.2, strongly suggestive that it is the descendant of massive dusty star-forming galaxies at 5 
ISSN:2041-8205
2041-8213
DOI:10.3847/2041-8213/ab5b9f