A Break In the Size-Stellar Mass Relation: Evidence for Quenching and Feedback in Dwarf Galaxies

Abstract

Mapping stars and gas in nearby galaxies is fundamental for understanding their growth and the impact of their environment. This issue is addressed by comparing the stellar "edges" of galaxies D stellar, defined as the outermost diameter where in situ star formation significantly drops, with the gaseous distribution parameterized by the neutral atomic hydrogen diameter measured at 1 Msun/pc2, DHI. By sampling a broad HI mass range 105 Msun < MHI < 1011 Msun, we find several dwarf galaxies with MHI < 109 Msun from the field and Fornax Cluster which are distinguished by D stellar >> DHI. For the cluster dwarfs, the average HI surface density near D stellar is 0.3 Msun/pc2, reflecting the impact of quenching and outside-in gas removal from ram pressure and tidal interactions. In comparison, D stellar/DHI ranges between 0.5-2 in dwarf field galaxies, consistent with the expectations from stellar feedback. Only more massive disk galaxies in the field can thus be characterized by the common assumption that D stellar DHI. We discover a break in the D stellar-M stellar relation at mbreak 4×108 Msun that potentially differentiates the low mass regime where the influence of stellar feedback and environmental processes more prominently regulates the sizes of nearby galaxies. Our results highlight the importance of combining deep optical and HI imaging for understanding galaxy evolution.

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