Abstract

We use a large sample of $\sim 350,000$ galaxies constructed by combining the UKIDSS UDS, VIDEO/CFHT-LS, UltraVISTA/COSMOS and GAMA survey regions to probe the major merging histories of massive galaxies ($>10^{10}\ \mathrm{M}_\odot$) at $0.005 < z < 3.5$. We use a method adapted from that presented in Lopez-Sanjuan et al. (2014) using the full photometric redshift probability distributions, to measure pair $\textit{fractions}$ of flux-limited, stellar mass selected galaxy samples using close-pair statistics. The pair fraction is found to weakly evolve as $\propto (1+z)^{0.8}$ with no dependence on stellar mass. We subsequently derive major merger $\textit{rates}$ for galaxies at $> 10^{10}\ \mathrm{M}_\odot$ and at a constant number density of $n > 10^{-4}$ Mpc$^{-3}$, and find rates a factor of 2-3 smaller than previous works, although this depends strongly on the assumed merger timescale and likelihood of a close-pair merging. Galaxies undergo approximately 0.5 major mergers at $z < 3.5$, accruing an additional 1-4 $\times 10^{10}\ \mathrm{M}_\odot$ in the process. Major merger accretion rate densities of $\sim 2 \times 10^{-4}$ $\mathrm{M}_\odot$ yr$^{-1}$ Mpc$^{-3}$ are found for number density selected samples, indicating that direct progenitors of local massive ($>10^{11}\mathrm{M}_\odot$) galaxies have experienced a steady supply of stellar mass via major mergers throughout their evolution. While pair fractions are found to agree with those predicted by the Henriques et al. (2014) semi-analytic model, the Illustris hydrodynamical simulation fails to quantitatively reproduce derived merger rates. Furthermore, we find major mergers become a comparable source of stellar mass growth compared to star-formation at $z < 1$, but is 10-100 times smaller than the SFR density at higher redshifts.

Highlights

  • Both major and minor galaxy mergers have been observationally and theoretically implicated in various aspects of galaxy formation and evolution

  • Using high quality spectroscopically obtained redshifts for a subset of galaxies in each field we find that 72%, 71%, 81% and 50% of zspec are found within the 1σ photometric PDF interval for the Ultra Deep Survey (UDS), VISTA Deep Extragalactic Observations (VIDEO), COSMOS and Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) regions, respectively

  • We find that the UDS, VIDEO and COSMOS fields are complete at stellar masses above 1010M (1011M ) below redshift 2.3, 1.0, 1.5 (3.5, 2.0, 3.0), respectively, while the GAMA region is found to be complete at redshift 0.2 (0.2)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Both major and minor galaxy mergers have been observationally and theoretically implicated in various aspects of galaxy formation and evolution. Modern wide-area, deep surveys represent the only way to observe the merger histories of massive galaxies with any statistical significance across cosmic time To this end, this paper, in combination with Duncan et al (in prep), D17, who study objects at z > 2 within the CANDELS field, presents a new method to measure stellar mass selected merger fractions across a large redshift range, exploiting the statistical power of large multi-wavelength datasets. Y -band data from the ESO VISTA Survey Telescope; and IR photometry from the Spitzer Legacy Program (SpUDS, PI: Dunlop) These observations over the wavelength range 0.3μm < λ < 4.6μm are vital for the computation of accurate photometric redshifts, stellar masses and rest-frame magnitudes out to the highest redshifts we probe in this work. We use a combination of spectroscopic redshifts from archival sources as well as the UDSz (Curtis-Lake et al 2012; Bradshaw et al 2013), which provide 2292 high quality spectroscopic redshifts at 0 < z < 4.5 (90% at z < 2) in the UDS region

UltraVISTA
Photometric redshift probability distributions
Photometric redshift prior
Photometric redshift confidence intervals
Best-fit solutions
Stellar masses
COUNTING GALAXY PAIRS
Close-pair selection
Close-pair weightings
Masked areas
Photometric redshift quality
Final weightings
The pair fraction
OBSERVED PAIR FRACTIONS
Constant stellar mass selected samples
Constant number density selected samples
MAJOR MERGER RATES
Calculating the merger rate from the pair fraction
Stellar mass added by mergers
Merger rates at a constant cumulative number density
Major merger stellar mass accretion rate density
Comparing the role of major mergers and star-formation
DISCUSSION
Comparison with semi-analytic models and hydrodynamical simulations
Field-to-field variation
Tests on the merger fraction
Findings
Galaxy stellar mass function choice
SUMMARY

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