Galaxy Assembly
Abstract
In a Lambda CDM Universe, galaxies grow in mass both through star formation and through addition of already-formed stars in galaxy mergers. Because of this partial decoupling of these two modes of galaxy growth, I discuss each separately in this biased and incomplete review of galaxy assembly; first giving an overview of the cosmic-averaged star formation history, and then moving on to discuss the importance of major mergers in shaping the properties of present-day massive galaxies. The cosmic-averaged star formation rate, when integrated, is in reasonable agreement with the build-up of stellar mass density. Roughly 2/3 of all stellar mass is formed during an epoch of rapid star formation prior to z=1, with the remaining 1/3 formed in the subsequent 9 Gyr during a period of rapidly-declining star formation rate. The epoch of important star formation in massive galaxies is essentially over. In contrast, a significant fraction of massive galaxies undergo a major merger at z<1, as evidenced by close pair statistics, morphologically-disturbed galaxy counts, and the build-up of stellar mass in morphologically early-type galaxies. Each of these methods is highly uncertain; yet, taken together, it is not implausible that the massive galaxy population is strongly affected by late galaxy mergers, in excellent qualitative agreement with our understanding of galaxy evolution in a Lambda CDM Universe.
Cite
@article{arxiv.astro-ph/0408023,
title = {Galaxy Assembly},
author = {Eric F. Bell},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:astro-ph/0408023},
year = {2007}
}
Comments
23 pages, 6 embedded figures. Invited review to appear in Planets to Cosmology: Essential Science in Hubble's Final Years, ed. M. Livio (Cambridge: CUP), in press (2005). Removed figure 5; added references and discussion; conclusions unchanged