New criteria for the selection of galaxy close pairs from cosmological simulations: evolution of the major and minor merger fraction in MUSE deep fields
E. Ventou, T. Contini, N. Bouch\'e, B. Epinat, J. Brinchmann, H., Inami, J. Richard, I. Schroetter, G. Soucail, M. Steinmetz, and P. Weilbacher

TL;DR
This study introduces new criteria for selecting galaxy close pairs from simulations and applies them to deep field observations to analyze the evolution of galaxy merger fractions across cosmic time.
Contribution
It proposes a novel set of criteria for identifying galaxy pairs and a correction term for merger fraction calculations, validated with extensive observational data.
Findings
Major merger fraction peaks at 25% around redshift 2-3.
Minor merger fraction remains roughly constant at about 20% up to redshift 3.
Merger fractions decline at higher redshifts beyond 3.
Abstract
It is still a challenge to assess the merger fraction of galaxies at different cosmic epochs in order to probe the evolution of their mass assembly. Using the Illustris cosmological simulations, we investigate the relation between the separation of galaxies in a pair, both in velocity and projected spatial separation space, and the probability that these interacting galaxies will merge in the future. From this analysis, we propose a new set of criteria to select close pairs of galaxies along with a new corrective term to be applied to the computation of the galaxy merger fraction. We then probe the evolution of the major and minor merger fraction using the latest MUSE deep observations over the HUDF, HDFS, COSMOS-Gr30 and Abell 2744 regions. From a parent sample of 2483 galaxies with spectroscopic redshifts, we identify 366 close pairs spread over a large range of redshifts ()…
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