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Bulge Growth and Quenching since z = 2.5 in CANDELS/3D-HST

Authors :
Lang, Philipp
Wuyts, Stijn
Somerville, Rachel S.
Schreiber, Natascha M. Forster
Genzel, Reinhard
Bell, Eric F.
Brammer, Gabe
Dekel, Avishai
Faber, Sandra M.
Ferguson, Henry C.
Grogin, Norman A.
Kocevski, Dale D.
Koekemoer, Anton M.
Lutz, Dieter
McGrath, Elizabeth J.
Momcheva, Ivelina
Nelson, Erica J.
Primack, Joel R.
Rosario, David J.
Skelton, Rosalind E.
Tacconi, Linda J.
van Dokkum, Pieter G.
Whitaker, Katherine E.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Exploiting the deep high-resolution imaging of all 5 CANDELS fields, and accurate redshift information provided by 3D-HST, we investigate the relation between structure and stellar populations for a mass-selected sample of 6764 galaxies above 10^10 Msun, spanning the redshift range 0.5 < z < 2.5. For the first time, we fit 2-dimensional models comprising a single Sersic fit and two-component (i.e., bulge + disk) decompositions not only to the H-band light distributions, but also to the stellar mass maps reconstructed from resolved stellar population modeling. We confirm that the increased bulge prominence among quiescent galaxies, as reported previously based on rest-optical observations, remains in place when considering the distributions of stellar mass. Moreover, we observe an increase of the typical Sersic index and bulge-to-total ratio (with median B/T reaching 40-50%) among star-forming galaxies above 10^11 Msun. Given that quenching for these most massive systems is likely to be imminent, our findings suggest that significant bulge growth precedes a departure from the star-forming main sequence. We demonstrate that the bulge mass (and ideally knowledge of the bulge and total mass) is a more reliable predictor of the star-forming versus quiescent state of a galaxy than the total stellar mass. The same trends are predicted by the state-of-the-art semi-analytic model by Somerville et al. In the latter, bulges and black holes grow hand in hand through merging and/or disk instabilities, and AGN-feedback shuts off star formation. Further observations will be required to pin down star formation quenching mechanisms, but our results imply they must be internal to the galaxies and closely associated with bulge growth.<br />Comment: Accepted by The Astrophysical Journal, 17 pages, 8 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1402.0866
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/788/1/11