4.6 Article

The zCOSMOS redshift survey: the three-dimensional classification cube and bimodality in galaxy physical properties

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 493, Issue 1, Pages 39-49

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:200810520

Keywords

galaxies: general; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: fundamental parameters

Funding

  1. INAF [PRIN-2006/1.06.10.08]
  2. ASI [ASI/COFISI/016/07/0]

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Aims. We investigate the relationships between three main optical galaxy observables (spectral properties, colors, and morphology), exploiting the data set provided by the COSMOS/zCOSMOS survey. The purpose of this paper is to define a simple galaxy classification cube, with a carefully selected sample of approximate to 1000 galaxies. Methods. Using medium resolution spectra of the first 1k zCOSMOS-bright sample, optical photometry from the Subaru/COSMOS observations, and morphological measurements derived from ACS imaging, we analyze the properties of the galaxy population out to z similar to 1. Applying three straightforward classification schemes (spectral, photometric, and morphological), we identify two main galaxy types, which appear to be linked to the bimodality of galaxy population. The three parametric classifications constitute the axes of a classification cube. Results. A very good agreement exists between the classification from spectral data (quiescent/star-forming galaxies) and the one based on colors (red/blue galaxies). The third parameter (morphology) is not as well correlated with the first two; in fact, a good correlation between the spectral classification and the classification based on morphological analysis (early-/late-type galaxies) is achieved only after partially complementing the morphological classification with additional color information. Finally, analyzing the 3D-distribution of all galaxies in the sample, we find that about 85% of the galaxies show a fully concordant classification, being either quiescent, red, bulge-dominated galaxies (similar to 20%) or star-forming, blue, disk-dominated galaxies (similar to 65%). These results imply that the galaxy bimodality is a consistent behavior both in morphology, color, and dominant stellar population, at least out to z similar to 1.

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