Evolution in the Dust Lane Fraction of Edge-on L* Spiral Galaxies since z=0.8
B.W. Holwerda (ESA), J. J. Dalcanton (University of Washington), D., Radburn-Smith (University of Washington), R. S. de Jong (AIP), P., Guhathakurta (Santa Cruz), A. Koekemoer (STSCI), R. J. Allen (STSCI), and T., B\"oker (ESA)

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of dust lane presence in edge-on spiral galaxies since z=0.8, finding little change over cosmic time and implications for galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of dust lane fraction evolution in spiral galaxies up to z=0.8, using COSMOS survey data and artificial redshifting techniques.
Findings
Dust lane fraction remains consistent (~80%) up to z~0.7.
Slight decrease in dust lanes at z=0.8, especially in starbursting and massive galaxies.
Dust lanes are likely long-lived or quickly reformed phenomena.
Abstract
The presence of a well-defined and narrow dust lane in an edge-on spiral galaxy is the observational signature of a thin and dense molecular disk, in which gravitational collapse has overcome turbulence. Using a sample of galaxies out to z~1 extracted from the COSMOS survey, we identify the fraction of massive disks that display a dust lane. Our goal is to explore the evolution in the stability of the molecular ISM disks in spiral galaxies over a cosmic timescale. We check the reliability of our morphological classifications against changes in restframe wavelength, resolution, and cosmic dimming with (artificially redshifted) images of local galaxies from SDSS. We find that the fraction of L* disks with dust lanes in COSMOS is consistent with the local fraction (~80%) out to z~0.7. At z=0.8, the dust lane fraction is only slightly lower. A somewhat lower dust lane fraction in…
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