Bibcode
Beckman, J.; Carretero, C.; Vazdekis, A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Chinese Journal of Astronomy & Astrophysics Supplement, Vol. 8, p. 77-83
Fecha de publicación:
10
2008
Número de citas
2
Número de citas referidas
1
Descripción
In the last decade the importance of mergers in the evolution of
galaxies has become evident. In this paper we illustrate this importance
by showing examples of merging galaxies, both local and at increasing
redshift. However before getting carried away by the charms of the
hierarchical model in which large galaxies have been built up by
successive mergers of smaller objects, it is worth looking at what
stellar population synthesis can tell us. Here I show that, using
indices which allow us to separate the effects of metallicity and age on
the spectra of the stellar populations of galaxies, we can show that the
most massive galaxies have the oldest stellar populations, an effect
which is enhanced within galaxy clusters and is maximized within the
most massive clusters. These measurements imply that a model where
mergers (even ``dry" mergers) are the main driver for galaxy evolution
cannot be giving us anything like a valid picture. The role of mergers
must be considerably more subtle than one would infer from the standard
semi-analytic models of galaxy evolution within a cosmological
framework.
Proyectos relacionados
Estudios Cinemáticos, Estructurales y de Composición, de los Medios Interestelares e Intergalácticos
El objetivo básico del proyecto es investigar la evolución de las galaxias mediante el entendimiento de la interacción del medio interestelar y las estrellas. La técnica principal que utilizamos es la cinemática bidimensional de galaxias enteras observada por nuestro instrumento GHaFaS, un interferometro Fabry Perot en el telescopio William
Prof.
John E. Beckman