The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2025)

The Average Stellar Population Age and Metallicity of Intermediate-redshift Quiescent Galaxies

  • Ivana Damjanov,
  • Margaret J. Geller,
  • Jubee Sohn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ada3c5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 982, no. 2
p. 178

Abstract

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The HectoMAP spectroscopic survey provides a unique mass-limited sample of more than 35,000 quiescent galaxies ( D _n 4000 > 1.5) covering the redshift range 0.2 10 ^10 M _⊙ ) quiescent population at intermediate redshift. These high-quality summed spectra enable full spectrum fitting and the related extraction of the average stellar population age and metallicity. The average galaxy age increases with the central D _n 4000 as expected. The correlation is essentially invariant with stellar mass; thus, D _n 4000 is a robust proxy for quiescent galaxy stellar population age. HectoMAP provides the first quiescent sample at intermediate redshift comparable with z ∼ 0 mass-complete data sets. Scaling relations derived from the HectoMAP summed spectra connect stellar age and metallicity with quiescent galaxy stellar mass up to z ∼ 0.5. Anticorrelation between the equivalent width (EW) of the [O ii ] emission line and stellar age, together with the mild increase in stellar age with stellar mass, supports a broad range of timescales for the mass assembly of intermediate-redshift quiescent systems. On average, the most massive galaxies ( M _* > 10 ^11 M _⊙ ) assemble the bulk of their stars at earlier epochs. A strong increase in the average stellar metallicity with stellar mass, along with the correlation between the [O ii ] EW and metallicity at 0.2 < z < 0.4, suggests that lower mass galaxies are more likely to have experienced recent star formation episodes; related feedback from massive stars affects the chemical enrichment of these galaxies.

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