The formation of bulges, discs and two-component galaxies in the CANDELS Survey at z < 3

Berta Margalef-Bentabol*, Christopher J. Conselice, Alice Mortlock, Will Hartley, Kenneth Duncan, Harry C. Ferguson, Avishai Dekel, Joel R. Primack

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

36 Scopus citations

Abstract

We examine a sample of 1495 galaxies in the CANDELS fields to determine the evolution of two-component galaxies, including bulges and discs, within massive galaxies at the epoch 1 < z <3 when the Hubble sequence forms. We fit all of our galaxies' light profiles with a single Sérsic fit, as well as with a combination of exponential and Sérsic profiles. The latter is done in order to describe a galaxy with an inner and an outer component, or bulge and disc component. We develop and use three classification methods (visual, F-test and the residual flux fraction) to separate our sample into one-component galaxies (disc/spheroidslike galaxies) and two-component galaxies (galaxies formed by an 'inner part' or bulge and an 'outer part' or disc). We then compare the results from using these three different ways to classify our galaxies.We find that the fraction of galaxies selected as two-component galaxies increases on average 50 per cent from the lowest mass bin to the most massive galaxies, and decreases with redshift by a factor of 4 from z = 1 to 3. We find that single Sérsic 'disc-like' galaxies have the highest relative number densities at all redshifts, and that two-component galaxies have the greatest increase and become at par with Sérsic discs by z = 1. We also find that the systems we classify as two-component galaxies have an increase in the sizes of their outer components, or 'discs', by about a factor of 3 from z = 3 to 1.5, while the inner components or 'bulges' stay roughly the same size. This suggests that these systems are growing from the inside out, whilst the bulges or protobulges are in place early in the history of these galaxies. This is also seen to a lesser degree in the growth of single 'disc-like' galaxies versus 'spheroid-like' galaxies over the same epoch.

Original languageEnglish
JournalMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Volume461
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 21 Sep 2016

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 The Authors.

Keywords

  • Galaxies: evolution
  • Galaxies: high-redshift
  • Galaxies: structure

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