Caught in the Act: The Assembly of Massive Cluster Galaxies at z=1.62
J. M. Lotz (1), C. Papovich (2), S. M. Faber (3), H.C. Ferguson (1),, N. Grogin (1), Y. Guo (4), D. Kocevski (3), A.M. Koekemoer (1), K-S. Lee (5),, D. McIntosh (6), I. Momcheva (7), G. Rudnick (8), A. Saintonge (9, 10), K-V., Tran (2, 11), A. van der Wel (12), C. Willmer (13)

TL;DR
This study reveals that massive galaxies in a z=1.62 proto-cluster experience significantly higher merger rates than field galaxies, indicating accelerated assembly and unique merger characteristics in dense environments.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of merger rates and properties between proto-cluster and field galaxies at z=1.62, highlighting environmental effects on galaxy assembly.
Findings
Proto-cluster galaxies have a 42% merger or double nucleus occurrence.
Merger rate in proto-cluster is 3-10 times higher than in the field.
Cluster mergers are mostly minor and often dissipationless.
Abstract
We present the recent merger history of massive galaxies in a spectroscopically-confirmed proto-cluster at z=1.62. Using HST WFC3 near-infrared imaging from the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS), we select cluster galaxies and z ~ 1.6 field galaxies with M_star >= 3 x 10^10 M_sun, and determine the frequency of double nuclei or close companions with projected separations less than 20 kpc co-moving and stellar mass ratios between 1:1 and roughly 10:1. We find that four out of five spectroscopically-confirmed massive proto-cluster galaxies have double nuclei, and 42 +13/-25 % of all M_star >= 3 x 10^10 M_sun cluster candidates are either in close pair systems or have double nuclei. In contrast, only 4.5 +/- 2.6% of the field galaxies are in close pair/double nuclei systems. The implied merger rate per massive galaxy in the proto-cluster is 3-10 times…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
