Did most present-day spirals form during the last 8 Gyrs? A formation history with violent episodes revealed by panchromatic observations
F. Hammer (1), H. Flores (1), D. Elbaz (2), X.Z. Zheng (1,3), Y.C., Liang (1,4), & C. Cesarsky (5) ((1) GEPI, Observatoire de Paris, France; (2), CEA, Saclay-SAp, France; (3) Max-Planck Institut fuer Astronomie, Germany;, (4) National Astronomical Observatories, CAS

TL;DR
This study provides observational evidence that many present-day spiral galaxies experienced recent episodic star formation and mergers within the last 8 Gyrs, reshaping their structures and contributing significantly to their stellar mass.
Contribution
It offers direct observational support for the idea that most intermediate mass spirals formed or reshaped during the last 8 Gyrs through episodic star formation and mergers.
Findings
15% of intermediate mass galaxies at z>0.4 are LIRGs.
LIRGs account for 38% of stellar mass formation since z=1.
75+-25% of spirals experienced recent major mergers.
Abstract
(abridged) Studies of distant galaxies have shown that ellipticals and large spirals were already in place 8 Gyr ago, leading to a very modest recent star formation in intermediate mass galaxies. This is challenged by a recent analysis (Heavens et al. 2004) of the fossil record of the stellar populations of ~10^5 nearby galaxies, which show that intermediate mass galaxies have formed or assembled the bulk of their stars 4 to 8 Gyr ago. Here we present direct observational evidence supporting the Heavens et al's findings from a long term, multi-wavelength study of 195 z>0.4 intermediate mass galaxies, mostly selected from the CFRS survey. We show that a recent and efficient star formation is revealed at IR wavelengths since ~15% of intermediate mass galaxies at z>0.4 are indeed luminous IR galaxies (LIRGs), a phenomenon far more common than in the local Universe. The star formation in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
