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Creators/Authors contains: "Pearl, Alan"

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  1. Abstract In this work, we compare star formation histories of massive (10.5 < log ( M * / M ) < 12) galaxies in the UniverseMachine model to those measured from the Large Early Galaxy Astrophysics Census (LEGA-C) at 0.6 < z < 1. Following the LEGA-C study, we investigate how 50% (t50) and 90% (t90) formation timescales depend on total stellar mass. We find good agreement between the observed and model timescales for the star-forming population Δ tSF ≲ 1 Gyr across the full mass range. In contrast, the observed age-mass correlation is weaker for the quiescent population compared to UniverseMachine models (ΔtQ ≲ 2 Gyr), especially at the high-mass end. This indicates continued star formation or additional processes in the most massive quiescent galaxies, a behavior not accounted for in the UniverseMachine model. 
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  2. Abstract We utilize ∼17,000 bright luminous red galaxies (LRGs) from the novel Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument Survey Validation spectroscopic sample, leveraging its deep (∼2.5 hr galaxy−1exposure time) spectra to characterize the contribution of recently quenched galaxies to the massive galaxy population at 0.4 <z< 1.3. We useProspectorto infer nonparametric star formation histories and identify a significant population of recently quenched galaxies that have joined the quiescent population within the past ∼1 Gyr. The highest-redshift subset (277 atz> 1) of our sample of recently quenched galaxies represents the largest spectroscopic sample of post-starburst galaxies at that epoch. At 0.4 <z< 0.8, we measure the number density of quiescent LRGs, finding that recently quenched galaxies constitute a growing fraction of the massive galaxy population with increasing look-back time. Finally, we quantify the importance of this population among massive ( log ( M / M ) > 11.2) LRGs by measuring the fraction of stellar mass each galaxy formed in the gigayear before observation,f1 Gyr. Although galaxies withf1 Gyr> 0.1 are rare atz∼ 0.4 (≲0.5% of the population), byz∼ 0.8, they constitute ∼3% of massive galaxies. Relaxing this threshold, we find that galaxies withf1 Gyr> 5% constitute ∼10% of the massive galaxy population atz∼ 0.8. We also identify a small but significant sample of galaxies atz= 1.1–1.3 that formed withf1 Gyr> 50%, implying that they may be analogs to high-redshift quiescent galaxies that formed on similar timescales. Future analysis of this unprecedented sample promises to illuminate the physical mechanisms that drive the quenching of massive galaxies after cosmic noon. 
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