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Article overview
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The Assembly of Diversity in the Morphologies and Stellar Populations of High-Redshift Galaxies | Casey Papovich
; Mark Dickinson
; Mauro Giavalisco
; Christopher J. Conselice
; Henry C. Ferguson
; | Date: |
6 Dec 2004 | Subject: | astro-ph | Affiliation: | 2,3,4), Mauro Giavalisco , Christopher J. Conselice , Henry C. Ferguson (3,4) ( Steward Obs., NOAO, STScI, Johns Hopkins, Caltech | Abstract: | We have studied the evolution in the morphologies, sizes, stellar-masses, colors, and internal color dispersion (ICD) of galaxies at z=1 and 2.3, using a near-IR, flux-limited catalog for the HDF-N. At z=1 most luminous galaxies have morphologies of early-to-mid Hubble-types, and many show transformations between their rest-frame UV-optical morphologies. Galaxies at z=2.3 have compact and irregular morphologies with no clearly evident Hubble-sequence candidates. The mean galaxy size grows from z=2.3 to 1 by 40%, and the density of galaxies larger than 3 kpc increases by 7 times. At z=1, the size-luminosity distribution is broadly consistent with that of local galaxies, with passive evolution. However, galaxies at z=2.3 are smaller than the large present-day galaxies, and must continue to grow in size and stellar mass. We have measured the galaxies’ UV-optical ICD, which quantifies differences in morphology and the relative amount of on-going star-formation. The mean and scatter in galaxies’ total colors and ICD increase from z=2.3 to 1. At z=1 many galaxies with large ICD are spirals, with a few irregular systems. Few z=2.3 galaxies have high ICD, and those that do are actively merging. We interpret this as evidence for the presence of older and more diverse stellar populations at z=1 that are not generally present at z>2. We conclude that the star-formation histories of galaxies at z>2 are dominated by discrete, recurrent bursts, which quickly homogenize the galaxies’ stellar content, and are possibly associated with mergers. The increase in the stellar-population diversification by z<1.4 implies that merger-induced starbursts occur less frequently than at higher redshifts, and more quiescent star-forming modes dominate. This transition coincides with the emergence of Hubble-sequence galaxies. [Abridged] | Source: | arXiv, astro-ph/0501088 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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