Feedback shaped the galaxy morphological sequence in presence of mergers
Masafumi Noguchi

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that galaxy morphological sequences are fundamentally shaped by feedback processes influencing galaxy mass fractions, with mergers playing a key role in bulge formation, especially around the halo mass peak.
Contribution
It reveals the fundamental link between galaxy feedback mechanisms, mass fractions, and morphological evolution through a simple galaxy evolution model including mergers.
Findings
Massive galaxies' halos merge with satellites having higher mass fractions, increasing bulge growth.
Low-mass galaxy halos tend to stay below the peak mass, limiting bulge formation.
Feedback processes like AGN and supernovae regulate galaxy mass fractions and morphology.
Abstract
Bulges and disks are major structural components that define galaxy morphology. The mass ratios of bulges and disks increase statistically with the galaxy mass, with the high-mass end occupied by elliptical galaxies. Although previous theoretical studies have succeeded in reproducing this morphological sequence, it is not yet fully understood why and how this morphological sequence emerged. Galaxy mergers accompanying dark matter halo mergers have been proposed as the major route for bulge formation. On the other hand, it is observationally known that the mass fraction of galaxies (stars plus cold gas) in dark matter halos attains the peak value at throughout the cosmic time. Using a simple galaxy evolution model including mergers, we show that this feature is the fundamental cause of the morphological sequence. Halos hosting massive galaxies,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
