A prediction on the age of thick discs as a function of the stellar mass of the host galaxy
Abstract: One of the suggested thick disc formation mechanisms is that they were born quickly and in situ from a turbulent clumpy disc. Subsequently, thin discs formed slowly within them from leftovers of the turbulent phase and from material accreted through cold flows and minor mergers. In this letter, I propose an observational test to verify this hypothesis. By combining thick disc and total stellar masses of edge-on galaxies with galaxy stellar mass functions calculated in the redshift range of $z\leq3.0$, I derived a positive correlation between the age of the youngest stars in thick discs and the stellar mass of the host galaxy; galaxies with a present-day stellar mass of $\mathcal{M}\star(z=0)<10{10}\,\mathcal{M}\odot$ have thick disc stars as young as $4-6\,{\rm Gyr}$, whereas the youngest stars in the thick discs of Milky-Way-like galaxies are $\sim10\,{\rm Gyr}$ old. I tested this prediction against the scarcely available thick disc age estimates, all of them are from galaxies with $\mathcal{M}\star(z=0)\gtrsim10{10}\,\mathcal{M}\odot$, and I find that field spiral galaxies seem to follow the expectation. On the other hand, my derivation predicts ages that are too low for the thick discs in lenticular galaxies, indicating a fast early evolution for S0 galaxies. I propose the idea of conclusively testing whether thick discs formed quickly and in situ by obtaining the ages of thick discs in field galaxies with masses of $\mathcal{M}\star(z=0)\sim10{9.5}\,\mathcal{M}\odot$ and by checking whether they contain $\sim5\,{\rm Gyr}$-old stars.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.