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We investigate how star formation quenching proceeds within central and satellite galaxies using spatially resolved spectroscopy from the SDSS-IV MaNGA DR15. We adopt a complete sample of star formation rate surface densities ($Sigma_{rm SFR}$), derived in Bluck et al. (2020), to compute the distance at which each spaxel resides from the resolved star forming main sequence ($Sigma_{rm SFR} - Sigma_*$ relation): $Delta Sigma_{rm SFR}$. We study galaxy radial profiles in $Delta Sigma_{rm SFR}$, and luminosity weighted stellar age (${rm Age_L}$), split by a variety of intrinsic and environmental parameters. Via several statistical analyses, we establish that the quenching of central galaxies is governed by intrinsic parameters, with central velocity dispersion ($sigma_c$) being the most important single parameter. High mass satellites quench in a very similar manner to centrals. Conversely, low mass satellite quenching is governed primarily by environmental parameters, with local galaxy over-density ($delta_5$) being the most important single parameter. Utilising the empirical $M_{BH}$ - $sigma_c$ relation, we estimate that quenching via AGN feedback must occur at $M_{BH} geq 10^{6.5-7.5} M_{odot}$, and is marked by steeply rising $Delta Sigma_{rm SFR}$ radial profiles in the green valley, indicating `inside-out quenching. On the other hand, environmental quenching occurs at over-densities of 10 - 30 times the average galaxy density at z$sim$0.1, and is marked by steeply declining $Delta Sigma_{rm SFR}$ profiles, indicating `outside-in quenching. Finally, through an analysis of stellar metallicities, we conclude that both intrinsic and environmental quenching must incorporate significant starvation of gas supply.
MaNGA provides the opportunity to make precise spatially resolved measurements of the IMF slope in galaxies owing to its unique combination of spatial resolution, wavelength coverage and sample size. We derive radial gradients in age, element abundan
We resolve 182 individual giant molecular clouds (GMCs) larger than 2.5 $times$ 10$^{5}$ Msun in the inner disks of five large nearby spiral galaxies (NGC 2403, NGC 3031, NGC 4736, NGC 4826, and NGC 6946) to create the largest such sample of extragal
Dust attenuation in star-forming spiral galaxies affects stars and gas in different ways due to local variations in dust geometry. We present spatially resolved measurements of dust attenuation for a sample of 232 such star-forming spiral galaxies, d
Bars inhabit the majority of local-Universe disk galaxies and may be important drivers of galaxy evolution through the redistribution of gas and angular momentum within disks. We investigate the star formation and gas properties of bars in galaxies s
We study 379 central and 159 satellite early-type galaxies with two-dimensional kinematics from the integral-field survey Mapping Nearby Galaxies at APO (MaNGA) to determine how their angular momentum content depends on stellar and halo mass. Using t