English

A decrease of the gas exchanges between galaxies and the IGM, from 12 to 6 billion years ago

Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics 2012-03-29 v1

Abstract

Using a representative sample of 65 intermediate mass galaxies at z \sim 0.6, we have inves- tigated the interplay between the main ingredients of chemical evolution: metal abundance, gas mass, stellar mass and SFR. All quantities have been estimated using deep spectroscopy and photometry from UV to IR and assuming an inversion of the Schmitt-Kennicutt law for the gas fraction. Six billion years ago, galaxies had a mean gas fraction of 32% \pm 3, i.e. twice that of their local counterparts. Using higher redshift samples from the literature, we explore the gas-phases and estimate the evolution of the mean gas fraction of distant galaxies over the last 11 Gy. The gas fraction increases linearly at the rate of 4% per Gyr from z \sim 0 to z \sim 2.2. We also demonstrate for a statistically representative sample that < 4% of the z \sim 0.6 galaxies are undergoing outflow events, in sharp contrast with z \sim 2.2 galaxies. The observed co-evolution of metals and gas over the past 6 Gyr favours a scenario in which the population of intermediate mass galaxies evolved as closed-systems, converting their own gas reservoirs into stars.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1203.6248,
  title  = {A decrease of the gas exchanges between galaxies and the IGM, from 12 to 6 billion years ago},
  author = {M. Rodrigues and M. Puech and F. Hammer and B. Rothberg and H. Flores},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1203.6248},
  year   = {2012}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T20:41:12.496Z