The Millennium Galaxy Catalogue: The connection between close pairs and asymmetry; implications for the galaxy merger rate
R. De Propris (CTIO), C. J. Conselice (Nottingham), S. P. Driver (St., Andrews), J. Liske (ESO), D. Patton (Trent), A. Graham (Swinburne), P. Allen, (St. Andrews)

TL;DR
This study compares galaxy asymmetry and close pair proximity to measure galaxy merger rates, finding both methods are complementary and suggest a low, flat merger rate evolution up to redshift 1.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of asymmetry and pair methods for estimating galaxy merger rates, highlighting their complementarity and addressing contamination issues.
Findings
Close pairs are more asymmetric than isolated galaxies.
At least 80% of asymmetric galaxies are interacting or merging.
Merger rate is approximately 2%, with flat evolution up to z~1.
Abstract
We compare the use of galaxy asymmetry and pair proximity for measuring galaxy merger fractions and rates for a volume limited sample of 3184 galaxies with -21 < M(B) -5 log h < -18 mag. and 0.010 < z < 0.123 drawn from the Millennium Galaxy Catalogue. Our findings are that: (i) Galaxies in close pairs are generally more asymmetric than isolated galaxies and the degree of asymmetry increases for closer pairs. At least 35% of close pairs (with projected separation of less than 20 h^{-1} kpc and velocity difference of less than 500 km s^{-1}) show significant asymmetry and are therefore likely to be physically bound. (ii) Among asymmetric galaxies, we find that at least 80% are either interacting systems or merger remnants. However, a significant fraction of galaxies initially identified as asymmetric are contaminated by nearby stars or are fragmented by the source extraction…
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