TY - JOUR
T1 - Quenching of galaxies at cosmic noon
T2 - Understanding the effect of the environment
AU - Singh, Akriti
AU - Guaita, Lucia
AU - Hibon, Pascale
AU - Häußler, Boris
AU - Lee, Kyoung Soo
AU - Ramakrishnan, Vandana
AU - Kumar, Ankit
AU - Padilla, Nelson
AU - Firestone, Nicole M.
AU - Song, Hyunmi
AU - Artale, Maria Celeste
AU - Hwang, Ho Seong
AU - Iribarren, Paulina Troncoso
AU - Gronwall, Caryl
AU - Gawiser, Eric
AU - Nantais, Julie
AU - Valdes, Francisco
AU - Park, Changbom
AU - Yang, Yujin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Authors 2025.
PY - 2025/8/1
Y1 - 2025/8/1
N2 - Context.We identified and analysed massive quiescent galaxies (MQGs) at z ≈ 3:1 within the 2 deg2 COSMOS field and explored the effect of the galaxy environment on quenching processes. By examining the variation in the quenched fraction and physical properties of these galaxies in different environmental contexts, including local densities, protoclusters, and cosmic filaments, we investigated the connection between environmental factors and galaxy quenching at cosmic noon. Aims. We selected MQGs at z ≈ 3:1 using deep photometric data from the COSMOS2020 catalogue combined with narrow-bandselected Lyman-emitters (LAEs) from the One-hundred-square-degree DECam Imaging in Narrowbands (ODIN) survey. We performed a spectral energy distribution fitting using the code BAGPIPES to derive the star formation histories and quenching timescales. We constructed Voronoi-tessellation density maps using LAEs, and we independently selected galaxies photometrically to characterize the galaxy environments. Methods. We identified 24 MQGs at z ≈ 3:1, each of which has a stellar mass higher than 1010:6 M⊙. These MQGs share remarkably uniform star-formation histories, with intense starburst phases followed by rapid quenching within short timescales (≤400 Myr). The consistency of these quenching timescales suggests a universal and highly e≤cient quenching mechanism in this epoch. We found no significant correlation between environmental density (either local or large scale) and galaxy quenching parameters such as the quenching duration, the quenched fraction, or the timing. MQGs show no preferential distribution with respect to protoclusters or filaments compared to massive star-forming galaxies. Some MQGs reside close to gas-rich filaments, but show no evidence of rejuvenated star formation. This implies gas-heating mechanisms and not gas exhaustion. These results indicate that the quenching processes at z ≈ 3:1 likely depend little on the immediate galaxy environment. Results. Our findings suggest that environmental processes alone, such as galaxy mergers, interactions, or gas stripping, cannot fully explain the galaxy quenching at z ≈ 3:1. Internal mechanisms such as feedback from AGN, stellar feedback, virial shock heating, or morphological quenching instead play an important role in quenching. Future spectroscopic observations must confirm the quiescent nature and precise redshifts of these galaxies. Observational studies of gas dynamics, gas temperature, and ionisation conditions within and around MQGs will also clarify the physical mechanisms driving galaxy quenching during this critical epoch of galaxy evolution.
AB - Context.We identified and analysed massive quiescent galaxies (MQGs) at z ≈ 3:1 within the 2 deg2 COSMOS field and explored the effect of the galaxy environment on quenching processes. By examining the variation in the quenched fraction and physical properties of these galaxies in different environmental contexts, including local densities, protoclusters, and cosmic filaments, we investigated the connection between environmental factors and galaxy quenching at cosmic noon. Aims. We selected MQGs at z ≈ 3:1 using deep photometric data from the COSMOS2020 catalogue combined with narrow-bandselected Lyman-emitters (LAEs) from the One-hundred-square-degree DECam Imaging in Narrowbands (ODIN) survey. We performed a spectral energy distribution fitting using the code BAGPIPES to derive the star formation histories and quenching timescales. We constructed Voronoi-tessellation density maps using LAEs, and we independently selected galaxies photometrically to characterize the galaxy environments. Methods. We identified 24 MQGs at z ≈ 3:1, each of which has a stellar mass higher than 1010:6 M⊙. These MQGs share remarkably uniform star-formation histories, with intense starburst phases followed by rapid quenching within short timescales (≤400 Myr). The consistency of these quenching timescales suggests a universal and highly e≤cient quenching mechanism in this epoch. We found no significant correlation between environmental density (either local or large scale) and galaxy quenching parameters such as the quenching duration, the quenched fraction, or the timing. MQGs show no preferential distribution with respect to protoclusters or filaments compared to massive star-forming galaxies. Some MQGs reside close to gas-rich filaments, but show no evidence of rejuvenated star formation. This implies gas-heating mechanisms and not gas exhaustion. These results indicate that the quenching processes at z ≈ 3:1 likely depend little on the immediate galaxy environment. Results. Our findings suggest that environmental processes alone, such as galaxy mergers, interactions, or gas stripping, cannot fully explain the galaxy quenching at z ≈ 3:1. Internal mechanisms such as feedback from AGN, stellar feedback, virial shock heating, or morphological quenching instead play an important role in quenching. Future spectroscopic observations must confirm the quiescent nature and precise redshifts of these galaxies. Observational studies of gas dynamics, gas temperature, and ionisation conditions within and around MQGs will also clarify the physical mechanisms driving galaxy quenching during this critical epoch of galaxy evolution.
KW - Galaxies: evolution
KW - Galaxies: high-redshift
KW - Infrared: galaxies
KW - Large-scale structure of Universe
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105012996694
U2 - 10.1051/0004-6361/202452406
DO - 10.1051/0004-6361/202452406
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105012996694
SN - 0004-6361
VL - 700
JO - Astronomy and Astrophysics
JF - Astronomy and Astrophysics
M1 - A68
ER -