The population of early-type galaxies: how it evolves with time and how it differs from passive and late-type galaxies
S. Tamburri, P. Saracco, M. Longhetti, A. Gargiulo, I. Lonoce, F., Ciocca

TL;DR
This study investigates how early-type and passive galaxies differ in their properties and evolution over redshift, revealing that morphological classification and stellar mass influence galaxy population dynamics from z=2.5 to z=0.6.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of morphological and passive galaxy classifications and their evolution, highlighting the constancy of fractions and the growth of massive galaxy densities over time.
Findings
ETGs cannot be distinguished from other types by low sSFR.
Fraction of massive ETGs increases at z<1.
Number and stellar mass densities of massive galaxies grow significantly from z=2.5 to 0.6.
Abstract
The aim of our analysis is twofold. On the one hand we are interested in addressing whether a sample of ETGs morphologically selected differs from a sample of passive galaxies in terms of galaxy statistics. On the other hand we study how the relative abundance of galaxies, the number density and the stellar mass density for different morphological types change over the redshift range 0.6<z<2.5. From the 1302 galaxies brighter than Ks=22 selected from the GOODS-MUSIC catalogue, we classified the ETGs on the basis of their morphology and the passive galaxies on the basis of their sSFR. We proved how the definition of passive galaxy depends on the IMF adopted in the models and on the assumed sSFR threshold. We find that ETGs cannot be distinguished from the other morphological classes on the basis of their low sSFR, irrespective of the IMF adopted in the models. Using the sample of 1302…
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