Two-phase galaxy evolution: the cosmic star-formation histories of spheroids and discs
Simon P. Driver, Aaron S.G. Robotham, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Michael, Brown, Andrew Hopkins, Jochen Liske, Steven Phillipps, Steve Wilkins

TL;DR
This paper presents a simple model for the cosmic star-formation histories of spheroids and discs based on two axioms, predicting their evolution, metallicity, and energy output, and comparing favorably with observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a minimalistic model linking AGN activity and star-formation history to derive spheroid and disc evolution, including a transition redshift and metallicity predictions.
Findings
Identification of a transition redshift at z ~ 1.7
Model fits well with observed cosmic spectral energy distributions
Mass-loss balances star-formation, keeping stellar mass density constant
Abstract
From two very simple axioms: (1) that AGN activity traces spheroid formation, and (2) that the cosmic star-formation history is dominated by spheroid formation at high redshift, we derive simple expressions for the star-formation histories of spheroids and discs, and their implied metal enrichment histories. Adopting a Baldry-Glazebrook initial mass function we use these relations and apply PEGASE.2 to predict the z=0 cosmic spectral energy distributions (CSEDs) of spheroids and discs. The model predictions compare favourably to the dust-corrected CSED recently reported by the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) team from the FUV through to the K band. The model also provides a reasonable fit to the total stellar mass contained within spheroid and disc structures as recently reported by the Millennium Galaxy Catalogue team. Three interesting inferences can be made following our axioms:…
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