4.7 Article

A calibration of the relation between the abundance of close galaxy pairs and the rate of galaxy mergers

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 391, Issue 4, Pages 1489-1498

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2008.13873.x

Keywords

galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation; galaxies: general; galaxies: interactions; galaxies: statistics

Funding

  1. International Max Planck Research School in Astrophysics
  2. Marie Curie Host Fellowship

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Estimates of galaxy merger rates based on counts of close pairs typically assume that most of the observed systems will merge within a few hundred Myr (for projected pair separations <= 25 h(-1) kpc). Here we investigate these assumptions using virtual galaxy catalogues derived from the Millennium Simulation, a very large N-body simulation of structure formation in the concordance Lambda cold dark matter (Lambda CDM) cosmology. These catalogues have been shown to be at least roughly consistent with a wide range of properties of the observed galaxy population at both low and high redshift. Here we show that they also predict close pair abundances at low redshift which agree with those observed. They thus embed a realistic and realistically evolving galaxy population within the standard structure formation paradigm, and so are well suited to calibrate the relation between close galaxy pairs and mergers. We show that observational methods, when applied to our mock galaxy surveys, do indeed identify pairs which are physically close and due to merge. The sample-averaged merging time depends only weakly on the stellar mass and redshift of the pair. At z <= 2 this time-scale is T approximate to T(0)r(25) M-*(-0.3), where r(25) is the maximum projected separation of the pair sample in units of 25 h(-1) kpc, M-* is the typical stellar mass of the pairs in units of 3 x 10(10) h(-1) M-circle dot and the coefficient T-0 is 1.1 Gyr for samples selected to have line-of-sight velocity difference smaller than 300 km s(-1) and 1.6 Gyr for samples where this velocity difference is effectively unconstrained. These time-scales increase slightly with redshift and are longer than assumed in most observational studies, implying that merger rates have typically been overestimated.

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