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Colors of intermediate z bulges in Groth and GOODS-N

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 December 2006

Lilian Domínguez-Palmero
Affiliation:
Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, C/Vía Láctea s/n, 38200 La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain email: ldp@iac.esbalcells@iac.es
Marc Balcells
Affiliation:
Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, C/Vía Láctea s/n, 38200 La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain email: ldp@iac.esbalcells@iac.es
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Abstract

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The chronology of bulge and disk formation is a major unsolved issue in galaxy formation, which impacts on our global understanding of the Hubble sequence. We present colors of the nuclear regions of intermediate-redshift disk galaxies, with the aim of obtaining empirical information of ages of bulges at 0.1 < z < 1.3. We work with a sample of 248 galaxies (123 inclined + 125 face-on) from the HST Groth Strip Survey (Groth et al. 1994) and another one with 404 objects (214 inclined + 190 face-on) from the HST GOODS-N field (Giavalisco et al. 2004), covering redshifts 0.1 z < 1.3. Those samples are apparent-diameter limited at RF814W < 1.4”, and have inclination 50° < i < 70° for the inclined samples and i < 50° for the face-on ones. We find that, as in the Local Universe, the minor axis color profiles are negative (bluer outward), and fairly gentle, indicating that bulge colors are not distinctly different from disk colors. We apply a conservative criterion to identify bulges and potential precursors of present-day bulges, based on nuclear excess surface brightness above the exponential profile of the outer parts. For galaxies with central brightness excesses, rest-frame color distributions show a red sequence. In contrast, galaxies without central brightness excesses show typical colors of star-forming populations. Clearly, something had truncated star formation in many high-density cores, already at z = 1. The truncation epoch is uncertain, 1.5 < z < 10. The color-magnitude distribution of intermediate-z bulges shows more color dispersion than that of bulges in the Local Universe. Most of bulges are as red as local bulges, while the remainder are significantly bluer, a possible sign of late bulge formation.

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © International Astronomical Union 2007

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