Bivariate Luminosity Function of Galaxy Pairs
Abstract
We measure the bivariate luminosity function (BLF) of galaxy pairs and use it to probe and characterize the galaxy-galaxy interaction between pair members. The galaxy pair sample is selected from the main galaxy sample of Sloan Digital Sky Survey and supplied with a significant number of redshifts from the LAMOST spectral and GAMA surveys. We find the BLFs depend on the projected distance dp between pair members. At large separation dp > 150 h-1\ kpc, the BLF degenerates into a luminosity function (LF) of single galaxies, indicating few interactions between pair members. At 100 h-1\ kpc ≤ dp ≤ 150 h-1\ kpc, the BLF starts to show the correlation between pair members, in the sense that the shape of the conditional luminosity function (CLF) of one member galaxy starts to depend on the luminosity of the other member galaxy. Specifically, the CLF with a brighter companion has a steeper faint-end slope, which becomes even more significant at 50 h-1\ kpc ≤ dp ≤ 100 h-1\ kpc. This behavior is consistent with the scenario, and also is the observational evidence, that dynamic friction drives massive major merger pairs to merge more quickly. At close distance dp ≤ 50 h-1\ kpc, besides the merging time-scale effect, the BLF also shows an overall brightening of Mr ≥ 0.04 mag, which reveals the enhanced star formation of the close-pair phase. By combining another statistical conclusion that the star formation rate of late-type galaxies in close pairs is enhanced at a level of about 40\%, we further conclude that the average starburst time-scale of close pairs is as long as 0.4 Gyr.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.