We have used the Hubble Space Telescope's Advanced Camera for Surveys to measure the mass density function of morphologically-selected early-type galaxies in the Gemini Deep Deep Survey fields, over the redshift range 0.9 < z < 1.6. Our imaging data set covers four well-separated sight-lines, and is roughly intermediate (in terms of both depth and area) between the GOODS/GEMS imaging data, and the images obtained in the Hubble Deep Field campaigns. Our images contain 144 galaxies with ultra-deep spectroscopy, and they have been analyzed using a new purpose-written morphological analysis code which improves the reliability of morphological classifications by adopting a quasi-petrosian image thresholding technique. We find that at z = 1 approximately 70% of the stars in massive galaxies reside in early-type systems. This fraction is remarkably similar to that seen in the local Universe. However, we detect very rapid evolution in this fraction over the range 1.0 < z < 1.6, suggesting that in this epoch the strong color-morphology relationship seen in the nearby Universe is beginning to fall into place. © 2007 International Astronomical Union.
CITATION STYLE
Abraham, R. G., McCarthy, P. J., Mentuch, E., Glazebrook, K., Nair, P., Gauthier, J. R., … Marzke, R. O. (2006). When do early-type galaxies form? In Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (Vol. 2, pp. 345–349). https://doi.org/10.1017/S174392130601012X
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