论文标题
在精炼调查中,使用星系对直接测量了银河系主要合并率和次要合并率以及$ z <3 $的出色质量积聚历史
A direct measurement of galaxy major and minor merger rates and stellar mass accretion histories at $z < 3$ using galaxy pairs in the REFINE survey
论文作者
论文摘要
我们使用$ \ sim 3.25 $ deg $^{2} $组合在$ 0 <z <3 $中衡量主要和次要合并在形成超过$ 0 <z <3 $的星系中的作用。我们测量了不同质量比的星系合并的对分数和合并分数,并用源自插图模拟的新测得的时间尺度量化合并速率,这是红移和合并质量比的函数。我们发现,质量比大于1:4的主要合并超过$ 0 <z <3 $,$ 0.85^{+0.19} _ { - 0.20} $平均为$次,而较小的合并降低比率为1:10 $ 1.43^{+0.5} {+0.5} _ { - 0.3} _ { - 0.3} _ { - 0.3} $ per times per calaxy。我们还量化了主要合并和次要合并在星系形成中的作用,从而使主要合并引起的质量增加为$ 93^{+49} _ { - 31} $%,而较小的合并则占$ 29^{+17} _ {+17} _ { - 12} $%;因此,主要合并比在这个时期的次要合并中增加了星系的恒星质量。总体而言,合并将使大量星系群比这个时期的质量增加一倍以上。最后,我们将结果与模拟进行了比较,发现在插图和半分析模型中,次要合并过于预测,这表明观察结果与理论在星系组装的基本方面之间存在不匹配。
We measure the role of major and minor mergers in forming the stellar masses of galaxies over $0<z<3$ using a combination of $\sim 3.25$ deg$^{2}$ of the deepest ground based near-infrared imaging taken to date as part of the REFINE survey. We measure the pair fraction and merger fractions for galaxy mergers of different mass ratios, and quantify the merger rate with newly measured time-scales derived from the Illustris simulation as a function of redshift and merger mass ratio. We find that over $0 < z < 3$ major mergers with mass ratios greater than 1:4 occur $0.85^{+0.19}_{-0.20}$ times on average, while minor mergers down to ratios of 1:10 occur on average $1.43^{+0.5}_{-0.3}$ times per galaxy. We also quantify the role of major and minor mergers in galaxy formation, whereby the increase in mass due to major mergers is $93^{+49}_{-31}$% while minor mergers account for an increase of $29^{+17}_{-12}$%; thus major mergers add more stellar mass to galaxies than minor mergers over this epoch. Overall, mergers will more than double the mass of massive galaxies over this epoch. Finally, we compare our results to simulations, finding that minor mergers are over predicted in Illustris and in semi-analytical models, suggesting a mismatch between observations and theory in this fundamental aspect of galaxy assembly.