Major Merging History in CANDELS. I. Evolution of the Incidence of Massive Galaxy-Galaxy Pairs from z=3 to z~0
Kameswara Bharadwaj Mantha, Daniel H. McIntosh, Ryan Brennan, Henry C., Ferguson, Dritan Kodra, Jeffrey A. Newman, Marc Rafelski, Rachel S., Somerville, Christopher J. Conselice, Joshua S. Cook, Nimish P. Hathi, David, C. Koo, Jennifer M. Lotz, Brooke D. Simmons

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of major galaxy-galaxy merger incidence from redshift 3 to 0 using close-pair statistics in the CANDELS survey, revealing complex trends dependent on selection criteria and emphasizing calibration needs for merger rate estimates.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how the observed major merger fraction varies with redshift and selection method, highlighting the importance of calibration in merger rate calculations.
Findings
Major companion fraction increases from 6% at z~0 to 16% at z~0.8.
The fraction turns over at z~1 and decreases to 7% at z~3.
Evolving observability timescales reconcile observed merger rates with theoretical predictions.
Abstract
The rate of major galaxy-galaxy merging is theoretically predicted to steadily increase with redshift during the peak epoch of massive galaxy development (). We use close-pair statistics to objectively study the incidence of massive galaxies (stellar ) hosting major companions (; i.e., 4:1) at six epochs spanning . We select companions from a nearly complete, mass-limited () sample of 23,696 galaxies in the five CANDELS fields and the SDSS. Using kpc projected separation and close redshift proximity criteria, we find that the major companion fraction based on stellar mass-ratio (MR) selection increases from 6% () to 16% (), then turns over at and decreases to 7% (). Instead, if we use a major…
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