Using Galaxy Pairs to Probe Star Formation During Major Halo Mergers
Peter S. Behroozi, Guangtun Zhu, Henry C. Ferguson, Andrew P. Hearin,, Jennifer Lotz, Joseph Silk, Susan Kassin, Yu Lu, Darren Croton, Rachel S., Somerville, Douglas F. Watson

TL;DR
This study uses galaxy pairs to investigate how major halo mergers influence star formation, finding modest quenching effects and increased star formation rates during close interactions, challenging some existing models.
Contribution
Introduces an observational method to select galaxies undergoing major halo mergers and analyzes their star formation response, providing new constraints for galaxy formation theories.
Findings
Major halo mergers modestly reduce star-forming fraction from 59% to 47%.
Enhanced specific star formation rates (~10% to 70%) occur during close pairs.
No rejuvenation of star formation observed in quenched galaxies during mergers.
Abstract
Currently-proposed galaxy quenching mechanisms predict very different behaviours during major halo mergers, ranging from significant quenching enhancement (e.g., clump-induced gravitational heating models) to significant star formation enhancement (e.g., gas starvation models). To test real galaxies' behaviour, we present an observational galaxy pair method for selecting galaxies whose host haloes are preferentially undergoing major mergers. Applying the method to central L* (10^10 Msun < M_* < 10^10.5 Msun) galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) at z<0.06, we find that major halo mergers can at most modestly reduce the star-forming fraction, from 59% to 47%. Consistent with past research, however, mergers accompany enhanced specific star formation rates for star-forming L* centrals: ~10% when a paired galaxy is within 200 kpc (approximately the host halo's virial radius),…
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