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The Insignificance of Major Mergers in Driving Star Formation at z approximately equal to 2

Authors :
Kaviraj, S
Cohen, S
Windhorst, R. A
Silk, J
O'Connell, R. W
Dopita, M. A
Dekel, A
Hathi, N. P
Straughn, A
Rutkowski, M
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2012.

Abstract

We study the significance of major mergers in driving star formation in the early Universe, by quantifying the contribution of this process to the total star formation budget in 80 massive (M(*) > 10(exp 10) Solar M) galaxies at z approx = 2. Employing visually-classified morphologies from rest-frame V-band HST imaging, we find that 55(exp +/-14)% of the star formation budget is hosted by non-interacting late-types, with 27(exp +/-18% in major mergers and 18(exp +/- 6)% in spheroids. Given that a system undergoing a major merger continues to experience star formation driven by other processes at this epoch (e.g. cold accretion, minor mergers), approx 27% is a likely upper limit for the major-merger contribution to star formation activity at this epoch. The ratio of the average specific star formation rate in major mergers to that in the non-interacting late-types is approx 2.2:1, suggesting that the typical enhancement of star formation due to major merging is modest and that just under half the star formation in systems experiencing major mergers is unrelated to the merger itself. Taking this into account, we estimate that the actual major-merger contribution to the star formation budget may be as low as approx 15%. While our study does not preclude a major-merger-dominated. era in the very early Universe, if the major-merger contribution to star formation does not evolve significantly into larger look-back times, then this process has a relatively insignificant role in driving stellar mass assembly over cosmic time.

Subjects

Subjects :
Astrophysics

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Notes :
DIP STE1869/1-1.GE625/15-1, , GO-11359, , NSF AST-1010033, , NAG5-12460, , ISF 6/08, , GIF G-1052-104.7/2009
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20120015653
Document Type :
Report