4.7 Article

From Naked Spheroids to Disky Galaxies: How Do Massive Disk Galaxies Shape Their Morphology?

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 929, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ac5a57

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Comunidad de Madrid under Atraccion de Talento grant [2018-T2/TIC-11612]
  2. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [PGC2018-093499-B-I00]
  3. Viera y Clavijo Senior program - ACIISI
  4. ULL
  5. Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades (MICIU/FEDER) [PGC2018-094975-C21]

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The majority of massive galaxies are found to build inside-out, with bulges growing more rapidly than disks; older bulges and disks are more massive and compact than younger structures; bulges display a bimodal distribution of mass-weighted ages, forming in two waves.
We investigate the assembly history of massive disk galaxies and describe how they shape their morphology through cosmic time. Using SHARDS and HST data, we modeled the surface brightness distribution of 91 massive galaxies at redshift 0.14 < z <= 1 in the wavelength range 0.5-1.6 mu m, deriving the uncontaminated spectral energy distributions of their bulges and disks separately. This spectrophotometric decomposition allows us to compare the stellar population properties of each component in individual galaxies. We find that the majority of massive galaxies (similar to 85%) build inside-out, growing their extended stellar disk around the central spheroid. Some bulges and disks could start forming at similar epochs, but these bulges grow more rapidly than their disks, assembling 80% of their mass in similar to 0.7 and similar to 3.5 Gyr, respectively. Moreover, we infer that both older bulges and older disks are more massive and compact than younger stellar structures. In particular, we find that bulges display a bimodal distribution of mass-weighted ages; i.e., they form in two waves. In contrast, our analysis of the disk components indicates that they form at z similar to 1 for both first- and second-wave bulges. This translates to first-wave bulges taking longer to acquire a stellar disk (5.2 Gyr) compared to second-wave, less compact spheroids (0.7 Gyr). We do not find distinct properties (e.g., mass, star formation timescale, and mass surface density) for the disks in both types of galaxies. We conclude that the bulge mass and compactness mainly regulate the timing of the stellar disk growth, driving the morphological evolution of massive disk galaxies.

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