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Galaxy Stellar Mass Assembly between 0.2<z<2 from the S-COSMOS survey
- Source :
- Astrophys.J.709:644-663,2010
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- We follow the galaxy stellar mass assembly by morphological and spectral type in the COSMOS 2-deg^2 field. We derive the stellar mass functions and stellar mass densities from z=2 to z=0.2 using 196,000 galaxies selected at F(3.6 micron) > 1 microJy with accurate photometric redshifts (sigma_((zp-zs)/(1+zs))=0.008 at i<22.5). Using a spectral classification, we find that z~1 is an epoch of transition in the stellar mass assembly of quiescent galaxies. Their stellar mass density increases by 1.1 dex between z=1.5-2 and z=0.8-1 (Delta t ~2.5 Gyr), but only by 0.3 dex between z=0.8-1 and z~0.1 (Delta t ~ 6 Gyr). Then, we add the morphological information and find that 80-90% of the massive quiescent galaxies (log(M)~11) have an elliptical morphology at z<0.8. Therefore, a dominant mechanism links the shutdown of star formation and the acquisition of an elliptical morphology in massive galaxies. Still, a significant fraction of quiescent galaxies present a Spi/Irr morphology at low mass (40-60% at log(M)~9.5), but this fraction is smaller than predicted by semi-analytical models using a ``halo quenching'' recipe. We also analyze the evolution of star-forming galaxies and split them into ``intermediate activity'' and ``high activity'' galaxies. We find that the most massive ``high activity'' galaxies end their high star formation rate phase first. Finally, the space density of massive star-forming galaxies becomes lower than the space density of massive elliptical galaxies at z<1. As a consequence, the rate of ``wet mergers'' involved in the formation of the most massive ellipticals must decline very rapidly at z<1, which could explain the observed slow down in the assembly of these quiescent and massive sources.<br />Comment: 37 pages, 29 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
- Subjects :
- Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- arXiv
- Journal :
- Astrophys.J.709:644-663,2010
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsarx.0903.0102
- Document Type :
- Working Paper
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/709/2/644