Testing a prediction of the merger origin of early-type galaxies: a correlation between stellar populations and asymmetry
Zsuzsanna Gyory, Eric F. Bell

TL;DR
This study confirms a correlation between asymmetry and younger stellar populations in early-type galaxies, supporting the merger hypothesis for their origin, using a larger sample and a new asymmetry measure.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking asymmetry to stellar age in early-type galaxies and introduces a model for galaxy evolution through mergers.
Findings
Asymmetry correlates with younger stellar ages.
Younger ages are associated with higher asymmetry.
The results support the merger origin of early-type galaxies.
Abstract
One of the key predictions of the merger hypothesis for the origin of early-type (elliptical and lenticular) galaxies is that tidally-induced asymmetric structure should correlate with signatures of a relatively young stellar population. Such a signature was found by Schweizer and Seitzer (1992; AJ, 104, 1039) at roughly 4sigma confidence. In this paper, we revisit this issue with a nearly ten-fold larger sample of 0.01<z<0.03 galaxies selected from the Two Micron All-Sky Survey and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We parameterize tidal structure using a repeatable algorithmic measure of asymmetry, and correlate this with color offset from the early-type galaxy color-magnitude relation. We recover the color offset-asymmetry correlation; furthermore, we demonstrate observationally for the first time that this effect is driven by a highly-significant trend towards younger ages at higher…
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