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Galaxy Zoo: The properties of merging galaxies in the nearby Universe - local environments, colours, masses, star-formation rates and AGN activity

Authors :
Darg, D. W.
Kaviraj, S.
Lintott, C. J.
Schawinski, K.
Sarzi, M.
Bamford, S.
Silk, J.
Andreescu, D.
Murray, P.
Nichol, R. C.
Raddick, M. J.
Slosar, A.
Szalay, A. S.
Thomas, D.
Vandenberg, J.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Following the study of Darg et al. (2009; hereafter D09a) we explore the environments, optical colours, stellar masses, star formation and AGN activity in a sample of 3003 pairs of merging galaxies drawn from the SDSS using visual classifications from the Galaxy Zoo project. While D09a found that the spiral-to-elliptical ratio in (major) mergers appeared higher than that of the global galaxy population, no significant differences are found between the environmental distributions of mergers and a randomly selected control sample. This makes the high occurrence of spirals in mergers unlikely to be an environmental effect and must, therefore, arise from differing time-scales of detectability for spirals and ellipticals. We find that merging galaxies have a wider spread in colour than the global galaxy population, with a significant blue tail resulting from intense star formation in spiral mergers. Galaxies classed as star-forming using their emission-line properties have average star-formation rates approximately doubled by the merger process though star formation is negligibly enhanced in merging elliptical galaxies. We conclude that the internal properties of galaxies significantly affect the time-scales over which merging systems can be detected (as suggested by recent theoretical studies) which leads to spirals being `over-observed' in mergers. We also suggest that the transition mass $3\times10^{10}{M}_{\astrosun}$, noted by \citet{kauffmann1}, below which ellipticals are rare could be linked to disc survival/destruction in mergers.<br />Comment: Second of two papers on SDSS mergers. This is the version accepted for publication by MNRAS (minus red-highlighted text from v2)

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.0903.5057
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2009.15786.x