Galaxy disks do not need to survive in the ΛcDM paradigm: The galaxy merger rate out to z ∼ 1.5 from morpho-kinematic data

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Abstract

About two-thirds of present-day, large galaxies are spirals such as the Milky Way or Andromeda, but the way their thin rotating disks formed remains uncertain. Observations have revealed that half of their progenitors, six billion years ago, had peculiar morphologies and/or kinematics, which exclude them from the Hubble sequence. Major mergers, i.e., fusions between galaxies of similar mass, are found to be the likeliest driver for such strong peculiarities. However, thin disks are fragile and easily destroyed by such violent collisions, which creates a critical tension between the observed fraction of thin disks and their survival within the ΛCDM paradigm. Here, we show that the observed high occurrence of mergers among their progenitors is only apparent and is resolved when using morpho-kinematic observations that are sensitive to all the phases of the merging process. This provides an original way of narrowing down observational estimates of the galaxy merger rate and leads to a perfect match with predictions by state-of-the-art ΛCDM semi-empirical models with no particular fine-tuning needed. These results imply that half of local thin disks do not survive but are actually rebuilt after a gas-rich major merger occurring in the past nine billion years, i.e., two-thirds of the lifetime of the universe. This emphasizes the need to study how thin disks can form in halos with a more active merger history than previously considered and to investigate what is the origin of the gas reservoir from which local disks would reform. © 2012. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..

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Puech, M., Hammer, F., Hopkins, P. F., Athanassoula, E., Flores, H., Rodrigues, M., … Yang, Y. B. (2012). Galaxy disks do not need to survive in the ΛcDM paradigm: The galaxy merger rate out to z ∼ 1.5 from morpho-kinematic data. Astrophysical Journal, 753(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/753/2/128

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