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Evolution of Luminous Galaxy Pairs out to z=1.2 in the HST/ACS COSMOS Field Jeyhan Kartaltepe, IfA, Hawaii Dave Sanders, IfA, Hawaii Nick Scoville, Caltech Venice, Italy 2006 March 28 Galaxies and Structures Through Cosmic Times
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Background Role of mergers in galaxy formation and evolution Methods: –Morphological approach Look for irregular or peculiar galaxies Select galaxies in the process of merging Morphology difficult to classify at high z Morphological K-correction –Pair statistics Look for number of close pairs Probes galaxies that will eventually merge Linked to merger rate by timescale of process
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Background Merger rates & pair evolution Parameterized as: (1+z) m & (1+z) n, respectively Previous work finds wide range of results: m, n = 0-6 Nearby Examples: The Mice & NGC 520
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The COSMOS Field Previous studies –Very small samples –Small range in z The COSMOS field has –High resolution ACS images and catalog –Contiguous 2-deg 2 field – over 1 million galaxies! –Multiwavelength ground and space-based follow-up Ground based photometry catalog Photometric redshifts Ideal survey for this study!
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Method: Selection of Sample Galaxies brighter than M v = -20.4 (~L * ) –Allows for a complete sample out to z limit –Probes most massive galaxies Reliable photometric redshifts –Detected in 4 bands (including Ks) –I < 26 –Small errors in z (~ 0.05 out to z=1.2) 97, 066 galaxies in sample
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Method: Searching for Pairs Ground based catalog –Use ground based catalog for photometric redshifts –Find pairs with a projected separation < 50 kpc in 11 redshift bins (0.1 < z < 1.2) –Misses some pairs < 3” apart due to blending ACS Catalog –Find pairs missed in ground based catalog (0.1” < sep < 0.3”) –Match to ground based catalog to get one photoz for pair –Visual inspection to remove artifacts
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Method: Searching for Pairs Local Sample –Catalog of pairs from SDSS (Allam et al. 2004) –Applied same search criteria –In 0 < z < 0.1 22 pairs over 462 square degrees Random line of sight galaxy pairs –Calculate number of random pairs expected at various separations and redshifts
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Results At higher separations, numbers match random Low number statistics at low redshift
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12 Galaxy Pairs Selected from all z-bins, various separations Selected based on presence of obvious signs of interaction
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12 Galaxy Pairs Selected from all z-bins, various separations Selected based on lack of obvious signs of interaction
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Results Power law is not a good fit Evidence of LSS? What is happening at z > 0.8 Value of n can range from 4-8! Evidence for strong evolution! Total of 3,990 pairs found! Evolution ~ (1+z) n Slope, n = 4.2 ± 0.69
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Conclusion Slope, n = 4.2 ± 0.69 Power law not best fit – range n ~ 4-8 Inconsistent with results that show zero/weak evolution but consistent with results that show strong evolution –Differences in selection criteria? Also consistent with strong evolution of –ULIGs (n=7.2 ± 3.6: Kim & Sanders 1998) –QSOs (n~6-8: Schmidt & Green 1983) Evidence suggests that these are formed by the merger of equal mass, ~L * galaxy pairs (e.g. Ishida 2004 & Guyon, Sanders & Stockton 2005)
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Future Work Remove L * criterion for comparison Push out to higher redshifts Morphological criterion Spectroscopic redshifts kinematic pairs Explore effects of LSS IR properties (morphologies, luminosities) –Spitzer observations –Ongoing ground based nIR observations
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Distribution of Pairs All pairs in field 0.7 < z < 0.8 bin
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Acknowledgments For all of their help and support with this project, thanks go to: Peter Capak Lisa Kewley The COSMOS team
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Summary of Previous Results
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Table of Results
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