Bibcode
Colombo, D.; Kalinova, V.; Bazzi, Z.; Sanchez, S. F.; Bolatto, A. D.; Wong, T.; Villanueva, V.; Rosolowsky, E.; Weiß, A.; French, K. D.; Leroy, A.; Barrera-Ballesteros, J.; Garay-Solis, Y.; Bigiel, F.; Tripathi, A.; Rodriguez, B.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Fecha de publicación:
7
2025
Revista
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
Galaxy evolution is largely driven by star formation activity or by the cessation of it, also called star formation quenching. In this paper, we present fundamental star formation scaling relations for groups of galaxies at different evolutionary stages. To do so, we used the integrated Extragalactic Database for Galaxy Evolution (iEDGE), which collects homogenised CO, optical continuum, and emission line information for 643 galaxies drawn from the CALIFA IFU dataset. By considering the patterns described by star-forming and retired regions across the galactic disc, we grouped the galaxies into different quenching stages using the emission line classification scheme, QueStNA. We observed that the molecular gas mass (Mmol) decreases from star-forming to retired systems and so does the molecular-to-stellar mass ratio (fmol). In contrast, star formation efficiency (SFE) is largely constant in the quenching stages dominated by star formation and rapidly declines afterwards. Additionally, we observed that this rapid decline is more pronounced in the centre of the galaxies compared to the rest of the discs, reflecting the inside-out quenching often displayed by nearby galaxies. We also noticed that the relations between Mmol and the stellar mass (M*) become increasingly shallow with the quenching stages; however, the relations between the star formation rate and Mmol steepen when moving from star-forming to retired systems. We also observed that a three-dimensional relation between star formation rate, M*, and Mmol exists only for purely star-forming galaxies, while data points from other quenching groups are scattered across the parameter space. Taken together, these pieces of evidence indicate that the quenching of the galaxies cannot be explained solely by a depletion of the molecular gas and that a significant decrease in the SFE is necessary to retire the centre of the galaxies beyond the star formation green valley.