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H-ATLAS/GAMA: Quantifying the morphological evolution of the galaxy population using cosmic calorimetry

Authors :
Eales, S
Fullard, A
Allen, M
Smith, MWL
Baldry, I
Bourne, N
Clark, CJR
Driver, S
Dunne, L
Dye, S
Graham, AW
Ibar, E
Hopkins, A
Ivison, R
Kelvin, LS
Maddox, S
Maraston, C
Robotham, ASG
Smith, D
Taylor, EN
Valiante, E
Van Der Werf, P
Baes, M
Brough, S ; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9796-1363
Clements, D
Cooray, A
Gomez, H
Loveday, J
Phillipps, S
Scott, D
Serjeant, S
Eales, S
Fullard, A
Allen, M
Smith, MWL
Baldry, I
Bourne, N
Clark, CJR
Driver, S
Dunne, L
Dye, S
Graham, AW
Ibar, E
Hopkins, A
Ivison, R
Kelvin, LS
Maddox, S
Maraston, C
Robotham, ASG
Smith, D
Taylor, EN
Valiante, E
Van Der Werf, P
Baes, M
Brough, S ; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9796-1363
Clements, D
Cooray, A
Gomez, H
Loveday, J
Phillipps, S
Scott, D
Serjeant, S
Source :
urn:ISSN:0035-8711; urn:ISSN:1365-2966; Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 452, 4, 3489-3507
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Using results from the Herschel Astrophysical Terrahertz Large-Area Survey (H-ATLAS) and the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) project, we show that, for galaxy masses above ≃ 108M⊙, 51 per cent of the stellar mass-density in the local Universe is in earlytype galaxies (ETGs; Sérsic n > 2.5) while 89 per cent of the rate of production of stellar mass-density is occurring in late-type galaxies (LTGs; Sérsic n < 2.5). From this zeroredshift benchmark, we have used a calorimetric technique to quantify the importance of the morphological transformation of galaxies over the history of the Universe. The extragalactic background radiation contains all the energy generated by nuclear fusion in stars since the big bang. By resolving this background radiation into individual galaxies using the deepest farinfrared survey with the Herschel Space Observatory and a deep near-infrared/optical survey with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and using measurements of the Sérsic index of these galaxies derived from the HST images, we estimate that ≃ 83 per cent of the stellarmass-density formed over the history of the Universe occurred in LTGs. The difference between this value and the fraction of the stellar mass-density that is in LTGs today implies there must have been a major transformation of LTGs into ETGs after the formation of most of the stars.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
urn:ISSN:0035-8711; urn:ISSN:1365-2966; Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 452, 4, 3489-3507
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1031074527
Document Type :
Electronic Resource