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The fate of high-redshift massive compact galaxies

Authors :
de la Rosa, Ignacio G.
La Barbera, Francesco
Ferreras, Ignacio
Almeida, Jorge Sanchez
Vecchia, Claudio Dalla
Martinez-Valpuesta, Inma
Stringer, Martin
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Massive high-redshift quiescent compact galaxies (nicknamed red nuggets) have been traditionally connected to present-day elliptical galaxies, often overlooking the relationships that they may have with other galaxy types. We use large bulge-disk decomposition catalogues based on the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to check the hypothesis that red nuggets have survived as compact cores embedded inside the haloes or disks of present-day massive galaxies. In this study, we designate a "compact core" as the bulge component that satisfies a prescribed compactness criterion. Photometric and dynamic mass-size and mass-density relations are used to show that, in the inner regions of galaxies at z ~ 0.1, there are "abundant" compact cores matching the peculiar properties of the red nuggets, an abundance comparable to that of red nuggets at z ~ 1.5. Furthermore, the morphology distribution of the present-day galaxies hosting compact cores is used to demonstrate that, in addition to the standard channel connecting red nuggets with elliptical galaxies, a comparable fraction of red nuggets might have ended up embedded in disks. This result generalises the inside-out formation scenario; present-day massive galaxies can begin as dense spheroidal cores (red nuggets), around which either a spheroidal halo or a disk are formed later.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures. Revised to match published MNRAS version; minor editorial changes throughout and updated references, with no change to results. 2016MNRAS.457.1916D

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1601.03920
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stw130