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Dry Mergers: A Crucial Test for Galaxy Formation

Astrophysics 2015-05-13 v2

Abstract

We investigate the role that dry mergers play in the build-up of massive galaxies within the cold dark matter paradigm. Implementing an empirical shut-off mass scale for star formation, we find a nearly constant dry merger rate of 6×105 \sim 6 \times 10^{-5} Mpc3^{-3} Gyr1^{-1} at z1z \leq 1 and a steep decline at larger z. Less than half of these mergers are between two galaxies that are morphologically classified as early-types, and the other half is mostly between an early-type and late-type galaxy. Latter are prime candidates for the origin of tidal features around red elliptical galaxies. The introduction of a transition mass scale for star formation has a strong impact on the evolution of galaxies, allowing them to grow above a characteristic mass scale of M,c6.3×1010M_{*,c} \sim 6.3 \times 10^{10} M_{\odot} by mergers only. As a consequence of this transition, we find that around M,cM_{*,c}, the fraction of 1:1 mergers is enhanced with respect to unequal mass major mergers. This suggest that it is possible to detect the existence of a transition mass scale by measuring the relative contribution of equal mass mergers to unequal mass mergers as a function of galaxy mass. The evolution of the high-mass end of the luminosity function is mainly driven by dry mergers at low z. We however find that only 1010% -20% of galaxies more massive than M,cM_{*,c} experience dry major mergers within their last Gyr at any given redshift z1z \le 1.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0809.1734,
  title  = {Dry Mergers: A Crucial Test for Galaxy Formation},
  author = {S. Khochfar and J. Silk},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0809.1734},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Replaced with MNRAS accepted version

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:18:42.954Z