Cosmic Evolution of Star-Formation Enhancement in Close Major-Merger Galaxy Pairs Since z = 1
C. K. Xu, D. L. Shupe, M. B'ethermin, H. Aussel, S. Berta, J. Bock, C., Bridge, A. Conley, A. Cooray, D. Elbaz, A. Franceschini, E. Le Floc'h, N. Lu,, D. Lutz, B. Magnelli, G. Marsden, S. J. Oliver, F. Pozzi, L. Riguccini, B., Schulz, N. Scoville, M. Vaccari, J. D. Vieira

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy interactions influence star formation over cosmic time, revealing a decreasing enhancement effect in galaxy pairs since z=1, likely due to higher gas fractions in earlier epochs.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of the evolution of star-formation enhancement in galaxy pairs from z=1 to the present, using Herschel and Spitzer data.
Findings
Star-formation enhancement in S+S pairs decreases with increasing redshift.
No significant enhancement observed in S+E pairs at any redshift.
Higher gas fractions at earlier epochs likely drive the observed trends.
Abstract
The infrared (IR) emission of M_* galaxies (10^{10.4} < M_{star} < 10^{11.0} M_\sun) in galaxy pairs, derived using data obtained in Herschel (PEP/HerMES) and Spitzer (S-COSMOS) surveys, is compared to that of single disk galaxies in well matched control samples to study the cosmic evolution of the star-formation enhancement induced by galaxy-galaxy interaction. Both the mean IR SED and mean IR luminosity of star-forming galaxies (SFGs) in SFG+SFG (S+S) pairs in the redshift bin of 0.6 < z < 1 are consistent with no star-formation enhancement. SFGs in S+S pairs in a lower redshift bin of 0.2 < z < 0.6 show marginal evidence for a weak star-formation enhancement. Together with the significant and strong sSFR enhancement shown by SFGs in a local sample of S+S pairs (obtained using previously published Spitzer observations), our results reveal a trend for the star-formation enhancement in…
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