Testing the Modern Merger Hypothesis via the Assembly of Massive Blue Elliptical Galaxies in the Local Universe
Tim Haines, D. H. McIntosh, S. F. S\'anchez, C. Tremonti, G. Rudnick

TL;DR
This study tests the modern merger hypothesis for forming elliptical galaxies by analyzing stellar populations and morphology in nearby blue, massive galaxies, finding most do not match the predicted merger signatures.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence challenging the modern merger hypothesis by examining stellar indices and morphology in a sample of candidate elliptical galaxies.
Findings
Two-thirds of the sample are inconsistent with the merger hypothesis.
Half of these show signs of minor mergers or quiescent histories.
Only one galaxy shows clear signatures of a recent major merger and quenching.
Abstract
The modern merger hypothesis offers a method of forming a new elliptical galaxy through merging two equal-mass, gas-rich disk galaxies fuelling a nuclear starburst followed by efficient quenching and dynamical stabilization. A key prediction of this scenario is a central concentration of young stars during the brief phase of morphological transformation from highly-disturbed remnant to new elliptical galaxy. To test this aspect of the merger hypothesis, we use integral field spectroscopy to track the stellar Balmer absorption and 4000\AA\ break strength indices as a function of galactic radius for 12 massive (), nearby (), visually-selected plausible new ellipticals with blue-cloud optical colours and varying degrees of morphological peculiarities. We find that these index values and their radial dependence correlate with specific…
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