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PRIMER: JWST/MIRI reveals the evolution of star-forming structures in galaxies at z<2.5

Authors :
Lyu, Yipeng
Magnelli, Benjamin
Elbaz, David
Pérez-González, Pablo G.
Correa, Camila
Daddi, Emanuele
Gómez-Guijarro, Carlos
Dunlop, James S.
Grogin, Norman A.
Koekemoer, Anton M.
McLeod, Derek J.
Lu, Shiying
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The stellar structures of star-forming galaxies (SFGs) undergo significant size growth during their mass assembly and must pass through a compaction phase as they evolve into quiescent galaxies (QGs). To shed light on the mechanisms behind this structural evolution, we study the morphology of the star-forming components of 665 SFGs at 0&lt;z&lt;2.5 measured using JWST/MIRI observation and compare them with the morphology of their stellar components taken from the literature. The stellar and star-forming components of most SFGs (66%) have extended disk-like structures that are aligned with each other and are of the same size. The star-forming components of these galaxies follow a mass-size relation, similar to that followed by their stellar components. At the highest mass, the optical S\&#39;ersic index of these SFGs increases to 2.5, suggesting the presence of a dominant stellar bulge. Because their star-forming components remain disk-like, these bulges cannot have formed by secular in-situ growth. We identify a second population of galaxies lying below the MIR mass-size relation, with compact star-forming components embedded in extended stellar components (EC galaxy). These galaxies are overall rare (15%) but become more dominant (30%) at high mass ($&gt;10^{10.5}M_\odot$). The compact star-forming components of these galaxies are also concentrated and slightly spheroidal, suggesting that this compaction phase can build dense bulge in-situ. Finally, we identify a third population of SFGs (19%), with both compact stellar and star-forming components. The density of their stellar cores resemble those of QGs and are compatible with being the descendants of EC galaxy. Overall, the structural evolution of SFGs is mainly dominated by a secular inside-out growth, which can, however, be interrupted by violent compaction phase(s) that can build dominant stellar bulges like those in massive SFGs or QGs.&lt;br /&gt;Comment: 24 pages, 17 figures, submitted to A&amp;A, comments are welcome

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2406.11571
Document Type :
Working Paper