The Structural Properties of Isolated Galaxies, Spiral-Spiral Pairs, and Mergers: The Robustness of Galaxy Morphology During Secular Evolution

Abstract

We present a structural analysis of nearby galaxies in spiral-spiral pairs in optical BVRI bands and compare with the structures of isolated spiral galaxies and galaxies in ongoing mergers. We use these comparisons to determine how galaxy structure changes during galaxy interactions and mergers. We analyze light concentration (C), asymmetry (A), and clumpiness (S) parameters, and use the projections of CAS parameter space to compare these samples. We find that the CAS parameters of paired galaxies are correlated with the projected separations of the pair. For the widest and closest pairs, the CAS parameters tend to be similar to those of isolated and ongoing major mergers (ULIRGs), respectively. Our results imply that galaxy CAS morphology is a robust quantity that only changes significantly during a strong interaction or major merger. The typical time-scale for this change in our paired sample, based on dynamical friction arguments, is short, t ~ 0.1 - 0.5 Gyr. We find average enhancement factors for the spiral pair asymmetries and clumpiness values of ~2.2 and 1.5. The S parameter, which is related to star formation activity, has a moderate level of enhancement suggesting that this activity in modern spirals depends more on internal processes than on external conditions. We furthermore test the statistical criterion for picking up interacting galaxies in an automated way by using the A-S projection plane. The diversity of our spiral pair sample in the CAS space suggests that structural/SF/morphological properties of interacting galaxies change abruptly only when the interaction becomes very strong and that the criteria for finding galaxies involved in major mergers from Conselice (2003) is effective.

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