The evolution of barred spiral galaxies in the Hubble Deep Fields North and South
Abstract
The frequency of barred spiral galaxies as a function of redshift contains important information on the gravitational influence of stellar discs in their dark matter haloes and may also distinguish between contemporary theories for the origin of galactic bulges. In this paper we present a new quantitative method for determining the strength of barred spiral structure, and verify its robustness to redshift-dependent effects. By combining galaxy samples from the Hubble Deep Field North with newly available data from the Hubble Deep Field South, we are able to define a statistical sample of 46 low-inclination spiral systems with I_814W<23.2mag. Analysing the proportion of barred spiral galaxies seen as a function of redshift, we find a significant decline in the fraction of barred spirals with redshift. The redshift distribution of 22 barred and 24 non-barred spirals with suitable inclinations is inconsistent with their being drawn from the same distribution at the 99 per cent confidence level. The physical significance of this effect remains unclear, but several possibilities include dynamically hotter (or increasingly dark-matter-dominated) high-redshift discs, or an enhanced efficiency in bar destruction at high redshifts. By investigating the formation of the `orthogonal' axis of Hubble's classification tuning fork, our result complements studies of evolution in the early-late sequence, and pushes to later epochs the redshift at which the Hubble classification sequence is observed to be in place.
- Publication:
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Pub Date:
- September 1999
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:astro-ph/9811476
- Bibcode:
- 1999MNRAS.308..569A
- Keywords:
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- Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- Submitted to MNRAS. 8 pages. LaTeX MNRAS format. The colour montage embedded in the paper is also available as a jpeg image