C. Nipoti, T. Treu, A. Leauthaud, K. Bundy, A. B. Newman, M. W. Auger
Early-type galaxies (ETGs) are observed to be more compact at z>2 than in the
local universe. Remarkably, much of this size evolution appears to take place
in a short \sim1.8 Gyr time span between z\sim2.2 and z\sim1.3, which poses a
serious challenge to hierarchical galaxy formation models where mergers
occurring on a similar timescale are the main mechanism for galaxy growth. We
compute the merger-driven redshift evolution of stellar mass
Mstar\propto(1+z)^aM, half-mass radius Re\propto(1+z)^aR and
velocity-dispersion sigma0\propto(1+z)^asigma predicted by concordance Lambda
Cold Dark Matter for a typical massive ETG in the redshift range z=1.3-2.2.
Neglecting dissipative processes, and thus maximizing evolution in surface
density, we find -1.52. Furthermore, we find that the scatter introduced in
the size-mass correlation by the predicted merger-driven growth is difficult to
reconcile with the tightness of the observed scaling law. We conclude that --
barring unknown systematics or selection biases in the current measurements --
minor and major mergers with spheroids are not sufficient to explain the
observed size growth of ETGs within the standard model.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1202.0971
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