Bibcode
Buitrago, Fernando; Trujillo, Ignacio
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics
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2
2024
Journal
Citations
10
Refereed citations
6
Description
Our understanding of how the size of galaxies has evolved over cosmic time is based on the use of the half-light (effective) radius as a size indicator. Although the half-light radius has many advantages for structurally parameterising galaxies, it does not provide a measure of the global extent of the objects, but only an indication of the size of the region containing the innermost 50% of the galaxy's light. Therefore, the observed mild evolution of the effective radius of disc galaxies with cosmic time is conditioned by the evolution of the central part of the galaxies rather than by the evolutionary properties of the whole structure. Expanding on recent works, we studied the size evolution of disc galaxies using the radial location of the gas density threshold for star formation as a size indicator. As a proxy to evaluate this quantity, we used the radial position of the truncation (edge) in the stellar surface mass density profiles of galaxies. To conduct this task, we selected 1048 disc galaxies with Mstellar > 1010 M⊙ and spectroscopic redshifts up to z = 1 within the HST CANDELS fields. We derived their surface brightness, colour and stellar mass density profiles. Using the new size indicator, the observed scatter of the size-mass relation (∼0.1 dex) decreases by a factor of ∼2 compared to that using the effective radius. At a fixed stellar mass, Milky Way-like (MW-like; Mstellar ∼ 5 × 1010 M⊙) disc galaxies have, on average, increased their sizes by a factor of two in the last 8 Gyr, while the surface stellar mass density at the edge position (Σedge) has decreased by more than an order of magnitude from ∼13 M⊙ pc−2 (z = 1) to ∼1 M⊙ pc−2 (z = 0). These results reflect a dramatic evolution of the outer part of MW-like disc galaxies, with an average radial growth rate of its discs of about 1.5 kpc Gyr−1.
Full Table 1 is available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr (ftp://130.79.128.5) or via https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/682/A110
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Traces of Galaxy Formation: Stellar populations, Dynamics and Morphology
We are a large, diverse, and very active research group aiming to provide a comprehensive picture for the formation of galaxies in the Universe. Rooted in detailed stellar population analysis, we are constantly exploring and developing new tools and ideas to understand how galaxies came to be what we now observe.
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