The Hubble Sequence in Groups: The Birth of the Early-Type Galaxies
R. Feldmann, C. M. Carollo, L. Mayer

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to explore how elliptical galaxies form and quench star formation in galaxy groups, revealing that mergers occur before group assembly and quenching follows morphological changes within a billion years.
Contribution
It demonstrates that elliptical galaxies form through early mergers prior to group assembly and that star formation quenching occurs rapidly after morphological transformation, without needing active galactic nucleus feedback.
Findings
Ellipticals form via mergers at z>1 before group assembly.
Star formation quenching lags morphological transformation, completing in less than a billion years.
Quenching is driven by gas accretion suppression and stripping as galaxies enter groups.
Abstract
The physical mechanisms and timescales that determine the morphological signatures and the quenching of star formation of typical (~L*) elliptical galaxies are not well understood. To address this issue, we have simulated the formation of a group of galaxies with sufficient resolution to track the evolution of gas and stars inside about a dozen galaxy group members over cosmic history. Galaxy groups, which harbor many elliptical galaxies in the universe, are a particularly promising environment to investigate morphological transformation and star formation quenching, due to their high galaxy density, their relatively low velocity dispersion, and the presence of a hot intragroup medium. Our simulation reproduces galaxies with different Hubble morphologies and, consequently, enables us to study when and where the morphological transformation of galaxies takes place. The simulation does…
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