Galaxy Mergers and Dark Matter Halo Mergers in LCDM: Mass, Redshift, and Mass-Ratio Dependence
Kyle R. Stewart, James S. Bullock, Elizabeth J. Barton (UC Irvine),, and Risa H. Wechsler (Stanford)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to predict dark matter halo and galaxy merger rates across redshifts, revealing their dependence on mass, luminosity, and merger ratio, and assessing their impact on galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides a universal fitting formula for dark matter halo merger rates and predicts galaxy merger rates using number density matching, highlighting their role in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Merger rates increase rapidly with redshift.
Only a small fraction of high-redshift galaxies experience recent major mergers.
Mergers significantly influence the properties of Lyman Break Galaxies.
Abstract
We employ a high-resolution LCDM N-body simulation to present merger rate predictions for dark matter halos and investigate how common merger-related observables for galaxies--such as close pair counts, starburst counts, and the morphologically disturbed fraction--likely scale with luminosity, stellar mass, merger mass ratio, and redshift from z=0 to z=4. We provide a simple 'universal' fitting formula that describes our derived merger rates for dark matter halos a function of dark halo mass, merger mass ratio, and redshift, and go on to predict galaxy merger rates using number density-matching to associate halos with galaxies. For example, we find that the instantaneous merger rate of m/M>0.3 mass ratio events into typical L > f L* galaxies follows the simple relation dN/dt=0.03(1+f)(1+z)^2.1 Gyr^-1. Despite the rapid increase in merger rate with redshift, only a small fraction of >0.4…
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