The merger fraction of post-starburst galaxies in UNIONS

Author:

Wilkinson Scott1ORCID,Ellison Sara L1ORCID,Bottrell Connor2ORCID,Bickley Robert W1ORCID,Gwyn Stephen3,Cuillandre Jean-Charles4ORCID,Wild Vivienne5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Victoria , Victoria, BC V8P 1A1, Canada

2. Kavli IPMU (WPI), UTIAS, The University of Tokyo , Kashiwa, Chiba 277-8583, Japan

3. Canadian Astronomy Data Centre, Herzberg Astronomy and Astrophysics , 5071 West Saanich Road, Victoria, BC V9E 2E7, Canada

4. AIM, CEA, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay, Université de Paris , F-91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France

5. School of Physics and Astronomy, University of St Andrews , North Haugh, St Andrews KY16 9SS, UK

Abstract

ABSTRACT Post-starburst galaxies (PSBs) are defined as having experienced a recent burst of star formation, followed by a prompt truncation in further activity. Identifying the mechanism(s) causing a galaxy to experience a post-starburst phase therefore provides integral insight into the causes of rapid quenching. Galaxy mergers have long been proposed as a possible post-starburst trigger. Effectively testing this hypothesis requires a large spectroscopic galaxy survey to identify the rare PSBs as well as high-quality imaging and robust morphology metrics to identify mergers. We bring together these critical elements by selecting PSBs from the overlap of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the Canada–France Imaging Survey and applying a suite of classification methods: non-parametric morphology metrics such as asymmetry and Gini-M20, a convolutional neural network trained to identify post-merger galaxies, and visual classification. This work is therefore the largest and most comprehensive assessment of the merger fraction of PSBs to date. We find that the merger fraction of PSBs ranges from 19 per cent to 42 per cent depending on the merger identification method and details of the PSB sample selection. These merger fractions represent an excess of 3–46× relative to non-PSB control samples. Our results demonstrate that mergers play a significant role in generating PSBs, but that other mechanisms are also required. However, applying our merger identification metrics to known post-mergers in the IllustrisTNG simulation shows that 70 per cent of recent post-mergers (≲200 Myr) would not be detected. Thus, we cannot exclude the possibility that nearly all PSBs have undergone a merger in their recent past.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

STFC

CEA

National Research Council Canada

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

University of Hawaii

Canadian Space Agency

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan

NASA

SSO

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

National Science Foundation

U.S. Department of Energy

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Max Planck Society

Higher Education Funding Council for England

American Museum of Natural History

University of Basel

University of Cambridge

Case Western Reserve University

University of Chicago

Drexel University

Institute for Advanced Study

Johns Hopkins University

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Los Alamos National Laboratory

MPA

New Mexico State University

Ohio State University

University of Pittsburgh

University of Portsmouth

Princeton University

United States Naval Observatory

University of Washington

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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