Litcius/Paper detail

Mapping accreted stars in early-type galaxies across the mass–size plane

Thomas Davison, Mark A. Norris, Ryan Leaman, H. Kuntschner, Alina Boecker, Glenn van de Ven

2021Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT Galaxy mergers are instrumental in dictating the final mass, structure, stellar populations, and kinematics of galaxies. Cosmological galaxy simulations indicate that the most massive galaxies at z = 0 are dominated by high fractions of ‘ex-situ’ stars, which formed first in distinct independent galaxies, and then subsequently merged into the host galaxy. Using spatially resolved MUSE spectroscopy we quantify and map the ex-situ stars in thirteen massive early-type galaxies. We use full spectral fitting together with semi-analytic galaxy evolution models to isolate the signatures in the galaxies’ light which are indicative of ex-situ populations. Using the large MUSE field of view we find that all galaxies display an increase in ex-situ fraction with radius, with massive and more extended galaxies showing a more rapid increase in radial ex-situ fraction (reaching values between ∼30 per cent and 100 per cent at 2 effective radii) compared to less massive and more compact sources (reaching between ∼5 per cent and 40 per cent ex-situ fraction within the same radius). These results are in line with predictions from theory and simulations which suggest ex-situ fractions should increase significantly with radius at fixed mass for the most massive galaxies.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsAstrophysicsGalaxyAstronomyGalaxy mergerLenticular galaxyGalaxy formation and evolutionElliptical galaxyRADIUSLuminous infrared galaxyGalaxy groupEffective radiusPeculiar galaxySurface brightness fluctuationComputer scienceComputer securityGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, PhenomenaStellar, planetary, and galactic studiesAstronomy and Astrophysical Research