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Satellites around massive galaxies since z~2

Authors :
M��rmol-Queralt��, E.
Trujillo, I.
P��rez-Gonz��lez, P. G.
Varela, J.
Barro, G.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Accretion of minor satellites has been postulated as the most likely mechanism to explain the significant size evolution of the massive galaxies over cosmic time. Using a sample of 629 massive (Mstar~10^11 Msun) galaxies from the near-infrared Palomar/DEEP-2 survey, we explore which fraction of these objects has satellites with 0.01 Msat < Mcentral < 1 (1:100) up to z=1 and which fraction has satellites with 0.1 Msat < Mcentral < 1 (1:10) up to z=2 within a projected radial distance of 100 kpc. We find that the fraction of massive galaxies with satellites, after the background correction, remains basically constant and close to ~30% for satellites with a mass ratio down to 1:100 up to z=1, and ~15% for satellites with a 1:10 mass ratio up to z=2. The family of spheroid-like massive galaxies presents a 2-3 times larger fraction of objects with satellites than the group of disk-like massive galaxies. A crude estimation of the number of 1:3 mergers a massive spheroid-like galaxy experiences since z~2 is around 2. For a disk-like galaxy this number decreases to ~1.<br />8 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. Submitted to MNRAS on Sept. 23, resubmitted after addressing referee comments

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f4694ec862ee657b64ac8ab5358b98f9