1111.0707 (Renyue Cen)
Renyue Cen
Utilizing a high-resolution (114 pc/h) adaptive mesh-refinement cosmological
galaxy formation simulation of the standard cold dark matter model with a large
(2000-3000 galaxies with stellar mass greater than 1e9 Msun) statistical
sample, we examine the role of major mergers in driving star formation at z>1
in a cosmological setting, after validating that some of the key properties of
simulated galaxies are in reasonable agreement with observations, including
luminosity functions, SF history, effective sizes and damped Lyman alpha
systems. We find that major mergers have a relatively modest effect on star
formation, in marked contrast to previous idealized merger simulations of disk
galaxies that show up to two orders of magnitude increase in star formation
rate. At z=2.4-3.7, major mergers tend to increase the specific star formation
rate by 10-25% for galaxies in the entire stellar mass range 10^9-10^12 Msun
probed. Their effect appears to increase with decreasing redshift, but is
capped at 60% at z=1.4-2.4. Two factors may account for this modest effect.
First, SFR of galaxies not in major mergers are much higher at z>1 than local
disk galaxy counterparts. Second, most galaxies at z>1 have small sizes and
contain massive dense bulges, which suppress the merger induced structural
effects and gas inflow enhancement. Various other predictions are also made
that will provide verifiable tests of the model.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1111.0707
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