Eight Billion Years of Disk Galaxy Evolution

Date

Authors

Bell, Eric F.
Barden, Marco
Zheng, Xianzhong
Papovich, Casey
Le Floc’H, Emeric
Rieke, George
Wolf, Christian

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Science+Business Media B.V.

Access Statement

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

We present a brief discussion of the evolution of disk galaxy stellar masses, sizes, rotation velocities, and star formation rates over the last eight billion years. Recent observations have failed to detect significant evolution in the stellar mass Tully-Fisher relation, stellar mass–size relation, and the stellar mass function of disk galaxies. Yet, most z < 1 star formation is in disks, and this star formation would be expected to drive a rapid growth of the total stellar mass (and therefore mass function) of disks in the last eight billion years. Such a build-up is not seen; instead, a rapid build-up in the total stellar mass in non-star-forming spheroid-dominated galaxies is observed. Large numbers of disk-dominated galaxies are systematically shutting off their star formation and building up a spheroid (or losing a disk) in the epoch 0 < z < 1.

Description

Citation

Source

Book Title

Island Universes: Structure and Evolution of Disk Galaxies

Entity type

Publication

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until