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The Morphology of Galaxies in the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey

Authors :
Masters, Karen L.
Maraston, Claudia
Nichol, Robert C.
Thomas, Daniel
Beifiori, Alessandra
Bundy, Kevin
Edmondson, Edward M.
Higgs, Tim D.
Leauthaud, Alexie
Mandelbaum, Rachel
Pforr, Janine
Ross, Ashley J.
Ross, Nicholas P.
Schneider, Donald P.
Skibba, Ramin
Tinker, Jeremy
Tojeiro, Rita
Wake, David
Brinkmann, Jon
Weaver, Benjamin A.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

We study the morphology of luminous and massive galaxies at 0.3<z<0.7 targeted in the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) using publicly available Hubble Space Telescope imaging from COSMOS. Our sample (240 objects) provides a unique opportunity to check the visual morphology of these galaxies which were targeted based solely on stellar population modelling. We find that the majority (74+/-6%) possess an early-type morphology (elliptical or S0), while the remainder have a late-type morphology. This is as expected from the goals of the BOSS target selection which aimed to predominantly select slowly evolving galaxies, for use as cosmological probes, while still obtaining a fair fraction of actively star forming galaxies for galaxy evolution studies. We show that a colour cut of (g-i)>2.35 selects a sub-sample of BOSS galaxies with 90% early-type morphology - more comparable to the earlier Luminous Red Galaxy (LRG) samples of SDSS-I/II. The remaining 10% of galaxies above this cut have a late-type morphology and may be analogous to the "passive spirals" found at lower redshift. We find that 23+/-4% of the early-type galaxies are unresolved multiple systems in the SDSS imaging. We estimate that at least 50% of these are real associations (not projection effects) and may represent a significant "dry merger" fraction. We study the SDSS pipeline sizes of BOSS galaxies which we find to be systematically larger (by 40%) than those measured from HST images, and provide a statistical correction for the difference. These details of the BOSS galaxies will help users of the data fine-tune their selection criteria, dependent on their science applications. For example, the main goal of BOSS is to measure the cosmic distance scale and expansion rate of the Universe to percent-level precision - a point where systematic effects due to the details of target selection may become important.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures; v2 as accepted by MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1106.3331
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2011.19557.x