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The MAGPI Survey: massive slow rotator population in place by z ∼ 0.3.

Authors :
Derkenne, Caro
McDermid, Richard M
D'Eugenio, Francesco
Foster, Caroline
Khalid, Aman
Harborne, Katherine E
van de Sande, Jesse
Croom, Scott M
Lagos, Claudia D P
Bellstedt, Sabine
Mendel, J Trevor
Mun, Marcie
Wisnioski, Emily
Bagge, Ryan S
Battisti, Andrew J
Bland-Hawthorn, Joss
Ferré-Mateu, Anna
Peng, Yingjie
Santucci, Giulia
Sweet, Sarah M
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society; 7/15/2024, Vol. 531 Issue 4, p4602-4610, 9p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We use the 'Middle Ages Galaxy Properties with Integral field spectroscopy' (MAGPI) survey to investigate whether galaxies have evolved in the distribution of their stellar angular momentum in the past 3–4 Gyr, as probed by the observational proxy for spin, λ<subscript>R</subscript>. We use 2D stellar kinematics to measure λ<subscript>R</subscript> along with detailed photometric models to estimate galaxy ellipticity. The combination of these measurements quantifies the kinematic classes of 'fast rotators' and the rarer 'slow rotators', which show no regular rotation in their line-of-sight velocity fields. We compare 51 MAGPI galaxies with log<subscript>10 </subscript>(M <subscript>⋆</subscript>/M<subscript>⊙</subscript>) > 10 to carefully drawn samples of MaNGA galaxies in the local Universe, selected to represent possible descendants of the MAGPI progenitors. The EAGLE simulations are used to identify possible evolutionary pathways between the two samples, explicitly accounting for progenitor bias in our results and the varied evolutionary pathways a galaxy might take between the two epochs. We find that the occurrence of slow rotating galaxies is unchanged between the MAGPI (z ∼ 0.3) and MaNGA (z ∼ 0) samples, suggesting the massive slow rotator population was already in place ∼4 Gyr ago and has not accumulated since. There is a hint of the MAGPI sample having an excess of high λ<subscript>R</subscript> galaxies compared to the MaNGA sample, corresponding to more ordered rotation, but statistically the samples are not significantly different. The large-scale stellar kinematics, as quantified through the λ<subscript>R</subscript> parameter, of galaxies at z ∼ 0.3 have already evolved into the diversity of structures seen today in the local Universe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Volume :
531
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178299743
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae1407