The Sizes of z9-10 Galaxies Identified in the BoRG Survey

Abstract

Redshift z=9--10 object selection is the effective limit of Hubble Space Telescope imaging capability, even when confirmed with Spitzer. If only a few photometry data points are available, it becomes attractive to add criteria based on their morphology in these J- and H-band images. One could do so through visual inspection, a size criterion, or alternate morphometrics. We explore a vetted sample of BoRG z9 and z10 candidate galaxies and the object rejected by Morishita+ (2018) to explore the utility of a size criterion in z=9-10 candidate selection. A stringent, PSF-corrected effective radius criterion (re<03) would result in the rejection of 65-70\% of the interlopers visually rejected by Morishita+. It may also remove up to 20\% of bona-fide brightest (L>>L*) z=9 or 10 candidates from a BoRG selected sample based on the Mason+ (2015) luminosity functions, assuming the Holwerda+ (2015) z9 size-luminosity relation. We argue that including a size constraint in lieu of a visual inspection may serve in wide-field searches for these objects in e.g. EUCLID or HST archival imaging with the understanding that some brightest (L>>L*) candidates may be missed. The sizes of the candidates found by Morishita+ (2018) follow the expected size distribution of z9 for bright galaxies, consistent with the lognormal in Shibuya+ (2015) and single objects. Two candidates show high star-formation surface density (SFR > 25 M/kpc2) and all merit further investigation and follow-up observations.

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