Galaxy Morphology from z6 through the eyes of JWST

Abstract

We analyze the Near Infrared (0.8-1μm) rest-frame morphologies of galaxies with M*/M>9 in the redshift range 0<z<6, compare with previous HST-based results and release the first JWST-based morphological catalog of 20,000 galaxies in the CEERS survey. Galaxies are classified into four main broad classes -- spheroid, disk+spheroid, disk, and disturbed -- based on imaging with four filters -- F150W, F200W, F356W, and F444W -- using Convolutional Neural Networks trained on HST/WFC3 labeled images and domain-adapted to JWST/NIRCam. We find that 90\% and 75\% of galaxies at z<3 have the same early/late and regular/irregular classification, respectively, in JWST and HST imaging when considering similar wavelengths. For small (large) and faint objects, JWST-based classifications tend to systematically present less bulge-dominated systems (peculiar galaxies) than HST-based ones, but the impact on the reported evolution of morphological fractions is less than 10\%. Using JWST-based morphologies at the same rest-frame wavelength (0.8-1μm), we confirm an increase in peculiar galaxies and a decrease in bulge-dominated galaxies with redshift, as reported in previous HST-based works, suggesting that the stellar mass distribution, in addition to light distribution, is more disturbed in the early universe. However, we find that undisturbed disk-like systems already dominate the high-mass end of the late-type galaxy population ( M*/M>10.5) at z5, and bulge-dominated galaxies also exist at these early epochs, confirming a rich and evolved morphological diversity of galaxies 1 Gyr after the Big Bang. Finally, we find that the morphology-quenching relation is already in place for massive galaxies at z>3, with massive quiescent galaxies ( M*/M>10.5) being predominantly bulge-dominated.

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