The Role Of Mergers In Galaxy Formation And Transformations
Abstract
Baryonic assembly of galaxies is one of the largest questions in extragalactic studies, which relates to many other issues, including environment, feedback, star formation, gas accretion and merging. In fact, all of these processes are related and must be accounted for and understood to paint a full picture of galaxy assembly. Perhaps the most straightforward of these processes to measure are the merging and star formation histories. I will present results of combining in a new reanalysis of the three deepest and large NIR surveys take to date: UDS, Ultra-VISTA and VIDEO as part of the REFINE project. Using consistently measured stellar masses and photometric redshifts for galaxies in these fields up to z =3, I will show how the major and minor merger rate can consistently be measured across these fields. Our new method involves a full use of the PDF for photo-zs and stellar masses. We show how the merger fraction and rate are lower than previous results and the implications for this for other methods of galaxy assembly and feedback mechanisms.
Invited Talk presented at the conference Galaxy Evolution Across Time, 12-16 June, Paris, France- Publication:
-
Galaxy Evolution Across Time
- Pub Date:
- June 2017
- DOI:
- 10.5281/zenodo.807662
- Bibcode:
- 2017geat.confE..38C
- Keywords:
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- galaxy formation;
- galaxy evolution;
- Zenodo community across2017