COSMOS Web: Morphological quenching and size-mass evolution of brightest group galaxies from z = 3.7

Abstract

We present a comprehensive study of the structural evolution of Brightest Group Galaxies (BGGs) from redshift z 0.08 to z = 3.7 using the James Webb Space Telescope's 255h COSMOS-Web program. This survey provides deep NIRCam imaging in four filters (F115W, F150W, F277W, F444W) across 0.54~deg2 and MIRI coverage in 0.2~deg2 of the COSMOS field. High-resolution NIRCam imaging enables robust size and morphological measurements, while multiwavelength photometry yields stellar masses, SFRs, and S\'ersic parameters. We classify BGGs as star-forming and quiescent using both rest-frame NUV--r--J colors and a redshift-dependent specific star formation rate (sSFR) threshold. Our analysis reveals: (1) quiescent BGGs are systematically more compact than their star-forming counterparts and exhibit steeper size--mass slopes; (2) effective radii evolve as Re (1+z)-α, with α = 1.11 0.07 (star-forming) and 1.40 0.09 (quiescent); (3) star formation surface density (SFR) increases with redshift and shows stronger evolution for massive BGGs (10(M/M) ≥ 10.75); (4) in the *--sSFR plane, a structural transition marks the quenching process, with bulge-dominated systems comprising over 80\% of the quiescent population. These results highlight the co-evolution of structure and star formation in BGGs, shaped by both internal and environmental processes, and establish BGGs as critical laboratories for studying the baryonic assembly and morphological transformation of central galaxies in group-scale halos.

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