Publication: The diverse evolutionary paths of simulated high- z massive, compact galaxies to z = 0
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2016
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Oxford University Press
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Wellons, Sarah, Paul Torrey, Chung-Pei Ma, Vicente Rodriguez-Gomez, Annalisa Pillepich, Dylan Nelson, Shy Genel, Mark Vogelsberger, and Lars Hernquist. 2015. “The Diverse Evolutionary Paths of Simulated High-Zmassive, Compact Galaxies Toz= 0.” Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 456 (1): 1030–48. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv2738.
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Abstract
Massive quiescent galaxies have much smaller physical sizes at high redshift than today. The strong evolution of galaxy size may be caused by progenitor bias, major and minor mergers, adiabatic expansion, and/or renewed star formation, but it is difficult to test these theories observationally. Herein, we select a sample of 35 massive, compact galaxies (M* = 1-3 x 10(11) M-circle dot, M*/R-1.5 > 10(10.5) M-circle dot/kpc(1.5)) at z = 2 in the cosmological hydrodynamical simulation Illustris and trace them forwards to z = 0 to uncover their evolution and identify their descendants. By z= 0, the original factor of 3 difference in stellarmass spreads to a factor of 20. The dark matter halo masses similarly spread from a factor of 5 to 40. The galaxies' evolutionary paths are diverse: about half acquire an ex situ envelope and are the core of a more massive descendant, a third survive undisturbed and gain very little mass, 15 per cent are consumed in a merger with a more massive galaxy, and a small remainder are thoroughly mixed by major mergers. The galaxies grow in size as well as mass, and only similar to 10 per cent remain compact by z = 0. The majority of the size growth is driven by the acquisition of ex situ mass. The most massive galaxies at z = 0 are the most likely to have compact progenitors, but this trend possesses significant dispersion which precludes a direct linkage to compact galaxies at z = 2. The compact galaxies' merger rates are influenced by their z = 2 environments, so that isolated or satellite compact galaxies (which are protected from mergers) are the most likely to survive to the present day.
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