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The effects of gas on morphological transformation in mergers: implications for bulge and disc demographics

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2009

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Oxford University Press
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Hopkins, Philip F., Rachel S. Somerville, Thomas J. Cox, Lars Hernquist, Shardha Jogee, Dusan Kereš, Chung-Pei Ma, Brant Robertson, and Kyle Stewart. 2009. “The Effects of Gas on Morphological Transformation in Mergers: Implications for Bulge and Disc Demographics.” Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 397 (2): 802–14. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2009.14983.x.

Abstract

Transformation of discs into spheroids via mergers is a well-accepted element of galaxy formation models. However, recent simulations have shown that the bulge formation is suppressed in increasingly gas-rich mergers. We investigate the global implications of these results in a cosmological framework, using independent approaches: empirical halo-occupation models (where galaxies are populated in haloes according to observations) and semi-analytic models. In both, ignoring the effects of gas in mergers leads to the overproduction of spheroids: low- and intermediate-mass galaxies are predicted to be bulge-dominated (B/T similar to 0.5 at < 10(10) M(circle dot), with almost no 'bulgeless' systems), even if they have avoided major mergers. Including the different physical behaviour of gas in mergers immediately leads to a dramatic change: bulge formation is suppressed in low-mass galaxies, observed to be gas-rich (giving B/T similar to 0.1 at < 10(10) M(circle dot), with a number of bulgeless galaxies in good agreement with observations). Simulations and analytic models which neglect the similarity-breaking behaviour of gas have difficulty reproducing the strong observed morphology-mass relation. However, the observed dependence of gas fractions on mass, combined with suppression of bulge formation in gas-rich mergers, naturally leads to the observed trends. Discrepancies between observations and models that ignore the role of gas increase with redshift; in models that treat gas properly, galaxies are predicted to be less bulge-dominated at high redshifts, in agreement with the observations. We discuss implications for the global bulge mass density and future observational tests.

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