Bulgeless galaxies in the COSMOS field: environment and star formation evolution at z < 1

Abstract

Combining the catalogue of galaxy morphologies in the COSMOS field and the sample of Hα emitters at redshifts z=0.4 and z=0.84 of the HiZELS survey, we selected 220 star-forming bulgeless systems (S\'ersic index n ≤ 1.5) at both epochs. We present their star formation properties and we investigate their contribution to the star formation rate function (SFRF) and global star formation rate density (SFRD) at z < 1. For comparison, we also analyse Hα emitters with more structurally evolved morphologies that we split into two classes according to their S\'ersic index n: intermediate ( 1.5 < n ≤ 3 ) and bulge-dominated (n > 3). At both redshifts the SFRF is dominated by the contribution of bulgeless galaxies and we show that they account for more than 60% of the cosmic SFRD at z < 1. The decrease of the SFRD with redshift is common to the three morphological types but it is stronger for bulge-dominated systems. Star-forming bulgeless systems are mostly located in regions of low to intermediate galaxy densities ( 1 - 4 Mpc-2) typical of field-like and filament-like environments and their specific star formation rates (sSFRs) do not appear to vary strongly with local galaxy density. Only few bulgeless galaxies in our sample have high (sSFR > 10-9 yr-1) and these are mainly low-mass systems. Above M* 1010 M bulgeless are evolving at a "normal" rate (10-9 yr-1 < sSFR <10-10 yr-1) and in the absence of an external trigger (i.e. mergers/strong interactions) they might not be able to develop a central classical bulge.

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