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The morphological identification of the rapidly evolving population of faint galaxies

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posted on 2024-07-13, 06:04 authored by Karl GlazebrookKarl Glazebrook, Richard S. Ellis, Basilio X. Santiago, Richard Griffiths
The excess numbers of blue galaxies at faint magnitudes are a long-standing cosmological puzzle. We present new number-magnitude counts as a function of galactic morphology from the first deep fields of the Cycle 4 Hubble Space Telescope Medium Deep Survey project. From a sample of 301 galaxies we define counts for elliptical, spiral and irregular/peculiar galaxies to I=22. We find two principal results. Firstly the elliptical and spiral galaxy counts both follow the predictions of high-normalisation no-evolution models at all magnitudes, indicating that regular Hubble types evolve only slowly to z~ 0.5. Secondly we find that irregular/peculiar galaxies, including multiple-peaked, possibly merging, objects, have a very steep number-magnitude relation and greatly exceed predictions based on proportions in local surveys. These systems make up half the total counts by I=22 and imply the rapidly-evolving component of the faint galaxy population has been identified.

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

0035-8711

Journal title

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume

275

Issue

2

Pagination

3 pp

Publisher

Wiley

Copyright statement

Copyright © 1995 Royal Astronomical Society. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. The definitive publication is available at www.interscience.wiley.com.

Language

eng

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