4.7 Article

ARE THE BULK OF z > 2 HERSCHEL GALAXIES PROTO-SPHEROIDS?

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 803, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/803/1/35

Keywords

galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation; galaxies: luminosity function, mass function; infrared: galaxies

Funding

  1. Italian Space Agency [ASI I/005/11/0]
  2. PRIN MIUR, project The Chemical and Dynamical Evolution of the Milky Way and Local Group Galaxies, (France) [2010LY5N2T]
  3. MPIA (Germany)
  4. INAF-IFSI/OAA/OAP/OAT (Italy)
  5. IAC (Spain)
  6. BMVIT (Austria)
  7. ESA-PRODEX (France)
  8. CEA/CNES (France)
  9. DLR (Germany)
  10. ASI/INAF (Italy)
  11. CICYT/MCYT (Spain)
  12. SISSA (Italy)
  13. LENS (Italy)

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We present a backward approach for the interpretation of the evolution of the near-IR and the far-IR luminosity functions (LFs) across the redshift range 0 < z < 3. In our method, late-type galaxies are treated by means of a parametric phenomenological method based on PEP/HerMES data up to z similar to 4, whereas spheroids are described by means of a physically motivated backward model. The spectral evolution of spheroids is modeled by means of a single-mass model, associated with a present-day elliptical with a K-band luminosity comparable to the break of the local early-type LF. The formation of proto-spheroids is assumed to occurr across the redshift range 1 <= z <= 5. The key parameter is represented by the redshift z(0.5) at which half of all proto-spheroids are already formed. For this parameter, a statistical study indicates values between z(0.5) = 1.5 and z(0.5) = 3. We assume z(0.5) similar to 2 as the fiducial value and show that this assumption allows us to describe accourately the redshift distributions and the source counts. By assuming z(0.5) similar to 2 at the far-IR flux limit of the PEP-COSMOS survey, the PEP-selected sources observed at z > 2 can be explained as progenitors of local spheroids caught during their formation. We also test the effects of mass downsizing by dividing the spheroids into three populations of different present-day stellar masses. The results obtained in this case confirm the validity of our approach, i.e., that the bulk of proto-spheroids can be modeled by means of a single model that describes the evolution of galaxies at the break of the present-day early-type K-band LF.

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