JADES: Rest-frame UV-to-NIR Size Evolution of Massive Quiescent Galaxies from Redshift z=5 to z=0.5

Abstract

We present the UV-to-NIR size evolution of a sample of 161 quiescent galaxies (QGs) with M*>1010M over 0.5<z<5. With deep multi-band NIRCam images in GOODS-South from JADES, we measure the effective radii (Re) of the galaxies at rest-frame 0.3, 0.5 and 1μ m. On average, QGs are 45% (15%) more compact at rest-frame 1μ m than they are at 0.3μ m (0.5μ m). Regardless of wavelengths, the Re of QGs strongly evolves with redshift, and this evolution depends on stellar mass. For lower-mass QGs with M*=1010-1010.6M, the evolution follows Re(1+z)-1.1, whereas it becomes steeper, following Re(1+z)-1.7, for higher-mass QGs with M*>1010.6M. To constrain the physical mechanisms driving the apparent size evolution, we study the relationship between Re and the formation redshift (zform) of QGs. For lower-mass QGs, this relationship is broadly consistent with Re(1+zform)-1, in line with the expectation of the progenitor effect. For higher-mass QGs, the relationship between Re and zform depends on stellar age. Older QGs have a steeper relationship between Re and zform than that expected from the progenitor effect alone, suggesting that mergers and/or post-quenching continuous gas accretion drive additional size growth in very massive systems. We find that the z>3 QGs in our sample are very compact, with mass surface densities e1010 M/kpc2, and their Re are possibly even smaller than anticipated from the size evolution measured for lower-redshift QGs. Finally, we take a close look at the structure of GS-9209, one of the earliest confirmed massive QGs at zspec4.7. From UV to NIR, GS-9209 becomes increasingly compact, and its light profile becomes more spheroidal, showing that the color gradient is already present in this earliest massive QG.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…