Interactions as a driver of galaxy evolution
2000
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES
Gravitational interactions and mergers are shaping and reshaping galaxies throughout the observable Universe. While observations of interacting galaxies at low redshifts yield detailed information about the processes at work, observations at high redshifts suggest that interactions and mergers were much more frequent in the past. Major mergers of nearby disc galaxies form remnants that share many properties with ellipticals and are, in essence, present-day proto-ellipticals. There is also tantalizing evidence that minor mergers of companions may help build bulges in disc galaxies. Gas plays a crucial role in such interactions. Because of its dissipative nature, it tends to get crunched into molecular form, turning into fuel for starbursts and active nuclei. Besides the evidence for ongoing interactions, signatures of past interactions and mergers in galaxies abound: tidal tails and ripples, counter-rotating discs and bulges, polar rings, systems of young globular clusters, and ageing starbursts. Galaxy formation and transformation is clearly a prolonged process, occurring up to the present-day. Overall, the currently available observational evidence points towards Hubble's morphological sequence being mainly a sequence of decreasing merger damage.