Evolution of the S\'ersic Index up to z=2.5 from JWST and HST

Abstract

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is unveiling the rest-frame near-IR structure of galaxies. We measure the evolution with redshift of the rest-frame optical and near-IR S\'ersic index (n), and examine the dependence on stellar mass and star-formation activity across the redshift range 0.5≤ z≤2.5. We infer rest-frame near-IR S\'ersic profiles for ≈ 15.000 galaxies in publicly available NIRCam imaging mosaics from the COSMOS-Web and PRIMER surveys. We augment these with rest-frame optical S\'ersic indices, previously measured from HST imaging mosaics. The median S\'ersic index evolves slowly or not at all with redshift, except for very high-mass galaxies (M > 1011~M), which show an increase from n≈ 2.5 to n≈ 4 at z<1. High-mass galaxies have higher n than lower-mass galaxies (M=109.5~M) at all redshifts, with a stronger dependence in the rest-frame near-IR than in the rest-frame optical at z>1. This wavelength dependence is caused by star-forming galaxies that have lower optical than near-IR n at z>1 (but not at z<1). Both at optical and near-IR wavelengths, star-forming galaxies have lower n than quiescent galaxies, fortifying the connection between star-formation activity and radial stellar mass distribution. At z>1 the median near-IR n varies strongly with star formation activity, but not with stellar mass. The scatter in near-IR n is higher in the green valley (0.25 dex) than on the star-forming sequence and among quiescent galaxies (0.18 dex) -- this trend is not seen in the optical because dust and young stars contribute to the variety in optical light profiles. Our newly measured rest-frame near-IR radial light profiles motivate future comparisons with radial stellar mass profiles of simulated galaxies as a stringent constraint on processes that govern galaxy formation.

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