Galaxy Stellar Mass Assembly between 0.2<z<2 from the S-COSMOS survey
O. Ilbert, M. Salvato, E. Le Floc'h, H. Aussel, P. Capak, H. J., McCracken, B. Mobasher, J. Kartaltepe, N. Scoville, D. B. Sanders, S., Arnouts, K. Bundy, P. Cassata, J.-P. Kneib, A. Koekemoer, O. Le Fevre, S., Lilly, J. Surace, Y. Taniguchi, L. Tasca, D. Thompson, L. Tresse, M.

TL;DR
This study analyzes galaxy stellar mass assembly from redshift 2 to 0.2 using COSMOS survey data, revealing key evolutionary phases, morphological transformations, and the decline of star formation in massive galaxies.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the timing and mechanisms of galaxy quenching and morphological change, especially the link between star formation shutdown and elliptical galaxy formation.
Findings
Quiescent galaxy stellar mass density increases rapidly between z=1.5-2 and z=0.8-1.
Most massive quiescent galaxies are elliptical at z<0.8.
The decline of star-forming galaxies and wet mergers slows down at z<1.
Abstract
We follow the galaxy stellar mass assembly by morphological and spectral type in the COSMOS 2-deg^2 field. We derive the stellar mass functions and stellar mass densities from z=2 to z=0.2 using 196,000 galaxies selected at F(3.6 micron) > 1 microJy with accurate photometric redshifts (sigma_((zp-zs)/(1+zs))=0.008 at i<22.5). Using a spectral classification, we find that z~1 is an epoch of transition in the stellar mass assembly of quiescent galaxies. Their stellar mass density increases by 1.1 dex between z=1.5-2 and z=0.8-1 (Delta t ~2.5 Gyr), but only by 0.3 dex between z=0.8-1 and z~0.1 (Delta t ~ 6 Gyr). Then, we add the morphological information and find that 80-90% of the massive quiescent galaxies (log(M)~11) have an elliptical morphology at z<0.8. Therefore, a dominant mechanism links the shutdown of star formation and the acquisition of an elliptical morphology in massive…
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