zCOSMOS - 10k-bright spectroscopic sample. The bimodality in the Galaxy Stellar Mass Function: exploring its evolution with redshift
L. Pozzetti, M. Bolzonella, E. Zucca, G. Zamorani, S. Lilly, A., Renzini, M. Moresco, M. Mignoli, P. Cassata, L. Tasca, F. Lamareille, C., Maier, B. Meneux, C. Halliday, P. Oesch, D. Vergani, K. Caputi, K. Kovac, A., Cimatti, O. Cucciati, A. Iovino, Y. Peng, M. Carollo

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of the galaxy stellar mass function up to redshift 1, revealing a bimodal distribution, different growth patterns for galaxy types, and challenging hierarchical models with a downsizing trend.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the galaxy stellar mass function evolution with redshift, highlighting the bimodality and contrasting growth of ETGs and LTGs.
Findings
Galaxy bimodality is well represented by two Schechter functions.
Low-mass galaxy number density increases faster over time.
ETGs grow faster at lower masses, with a median building redshift increasing with mass.
Abstract
We present the Galaxy Stellar Mass Function (MF) up to z~1 from the zCOSMOS-bright 10k spectroscopic sample. We investigate the total MF and the contribution of ETGs and LTGs, defined by different criteria (SED, morphology or star formation). We unveil a galaxy bimodality in the global MF, better represented by 2 Schechter functions dominated by ETGs and LTGs, respectively. For the global population we confirm that low-mass galaxies number density increases later and faster than for massive galaxies. We find that the MF evolution at intermediate-low values of Mstar (logM<10.6) is mostly explained by the growth in stellar mass driven by smoothly decreasing star formation activities. The low residual evolution is consistent with ~0.16 merger per galaxy per Gyr (of which fewer than 0.1 are major). We find that ETGs increase in number density with cosmic time faster for decreasing Mstar,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
