To High Redshift and Low Mass: Exploring the Emergence of Quenched Galaxies and Their Environments at 3 < z < 6 in the Ultra-deep JADES MIRI F770W Parallel
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Author
Alberts, Stacey
Williams, Christina C.
Helton, Jakob M.
Suess, Katherine A.
Ji, Zhiyuan
Shivaei, Irene
Lyu, Jianwei
Rieke, George
Baker, William M.
Bonaventura, Nina
Bunker, Andrew J.
Carniani, Stefano
Charlot, Stephane
Curtis-Lake, Emma
D’Eugenio, Francesco
Eisenstein, Daniel J.
de Graaff, Anna
Hainline, Kevin N.
Hausen, Ryan
Johnson, Benjamin D.
Maiolino, Roberto
Parlanti, Eleonora
Rieke, Marcia J.
Robertson, Brant E.
Sun, Yang
Tacchella, Sandro
Willmer, Christopher N. A.
Willott, Chris J.
Attention
2299/28406
Abstract
We present the robust selection of high-redshift quiescent galaxies (QG) and poststarburst (PSB) galaxies using ultra-deep NIRCam and MIRI imaging from the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES). At 3 < z < 6, MIRI 7.7 μm imaging provides rest-frame J band, which is commonly used to break the degeneracy between old stellar populations and dust attenuation at lower redshifts. We identify 23 passively evolving galaxies in UVJ color space in a mass-limited (log M ⋆/M ⊙ ≥ 8.5) sample over 8.8 arcmin2. An evaluation of the contribution of the 7.7 μm shows that JADES-like NIRCam coverage (9+ photometric bands) can compensate for lacking the J band at these redshifts; however, more limited three-band selections perform better with MIRI. Our sample is characterized by rapid quenching timescales (∼100–600 Myr) with formation redshifts z f ≲ 9 and includes a potential record-holding massive QG at zphot=5.33−0.17+0.16 and two QGs with evidence for significant residual dust content (A V ∼ 1–2). In addition, we present a large sample of 12 log M ⋆/M ⊙ = 8.5–9.5 PSBs, demonstrating that UVJ selection can be extended to low mass. An analysis of the environment of our sample reveals that the group known as the Cosmic Rose contains a massive QG and a dust-obscured star-forming galaxy (a so-called Jekyll and Hyde pair) plus three additional QGs within ∼20 kpc. Moreover, the Cosmic Rose is part of a larger overdensity at z ∼ 3.7, which contains 7/12 of our low-mass PSBs. Another four low-mass PSBs are members of an overdensity at z ∼ 3.4; this result strongly indicates low-mass PSBs are preferentially associated with overdense environments at z > 3.
Publication date
2024-11-01Published in
The Astrophysical JournalPublished version
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad66ccOther links
http://hdl.handle.net/2299/28406Metadata
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