ON THE ASSEMBLY HISTORY OF STELLAR COMPONENTS IN MASSIVE GALAXIES

Matsuoka & Kawara showed that the number density of the most massive galaxies (log M/M sub([middot in circle]) = 11.5-12.0) increases faster than that of the next massive group (log M/M sub([middot in circle]) = 11.0-11.5) during 0 < z < 1. This appears to be in contradiction to the appare...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2013-03, Vol.766 (1), p.1-11
Hauptverfasser: Lee, Jaehyun, Yi, Sukyoung K
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Matsuoka & Kawara showed that the number density of the most massive galaxies (log M/M sub([middot in circle]) = 11.5-12.0) increases faster than that of the next massive group (log M/M sub([middot in circle]) = 11.0-11.5) during 0 < z < 1. This appears to be in contradiction to the apparent "downsizing effect." We attempt to understand the two observational findings in the context of the hierarchical merger paradigm using semi-analytic techniques. Our models closely reproduce the result of Matsuoka & Kawara. Downsizing can also be understood as larger galaxies have, on average, smaller assembly ages but larger stellar ages. Our fiducial models further reveal details of the history of the stellar mass growth of massive galaxies. The most massive galaxies (log M/M sub([middot in circle]) = 11.5-12.0 at z = 0), which are mostly the brightest cluster galaxies, obtain roughly 70% of their stellar components via merger accretion. The role of merger accretion monotonically declines with galaxy mass: 40% for log M/M sub([middot in circle]) = 11.0-11.5 and 20% for log M/M sub([middot in circle]) = 10.5-11.0 at z = 0. The specific accreted stellar mass rates via galaxy mergers decline very slowly during the whole redshift range, while specific star formation rates sharply decrease with time. In the case of the most massive galaxies, merger accretion becomes the most important channel for the stellar mass growth at z ~ 2. On the other hand, in situ star formation is always the dominant channel in L[low *] galaxies.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.1088/0004-637X/766/1/38