Quenching and Morphological Transformation in Semi-Analytic Models and CANDELS
Ryan Brennan, Viraj Pandya, Rachel S. Somerville, Guillermo Barro,, Edward N. Taylor, Stijn Wuyts, Eric F. Bell, Avishai Dekel, Henry C., Ferguson, Daniel H. McIntosh, Casey Papovich, Joel Primack

TL;DR
This study investigates galaxy evolution from z~3 to present by comparing observed morphological and star formation properties with semi-analytic models, highlighting the roles of mergers and disk instabilities in spheroid growth and quenching.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytic model incorporating bulge growth via mergers and disk instabilities, successfully reproducing key observed galaxy population trends over cosmic time.
Findings
The fraction of star forming disks declines steadily over time.
Quiescent spheroids build up gradually from z~3 to present.
Models with disk instability channels better match observations.
Abstract
We examine the spheroid growth and star formation quenching experienced by galaxies from z~3 to the present by studying the evolution with redshift of the quiescent and spheroid-dominated fractions of galaxies from the CANDELS and GAMA surveys. We compare the observed fractions with predictions from a semi-analytic model which includes prescriptions for bulge growth and AGN feedback due to mergers and disk instabilities. We facilitate direct morphological comparison by converting our model bulge-to-total stellar mass ratios to Sersic indices. We then subdivide our population into the four quadrants of the sSFR-Sersic index plane and study the buildup of each of these subpopulations. We find that the fraction of star forming disks declines steadily, while the fraction of quiescent spheroids builds up over cosmic time. The fractions of star forming spheroids and quiescent disks are both…
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