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26 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0411772

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The Evolution of Early-type Red Galaxies with the GEMS Survey: Luminosity-size and Stellar Mass-size Relations Since z=1
Daniel H. McIntosh ; Eric F. Bell ; Hans-Walter Rix ; Christian Wolf ; Catherine Heymans ; Chien Y. Peng ; Rachel S. Somerville ; Marco Barden ; Steven V. W. Beckwith ; Andrea Borch ; John A. R. Caldwell ; Boris Haeussler ; Knud Jahnke ; Shardha Jogee ; Klaus Meisenheimer ; Sebastian F. Sanchez ; Lutz Wisotzki ;
Date 29 Nov 2004
Journal Astrophys.J. 632 (2005) 191-209
Subject astro-ph
AbstractWe combine HST/ACS imaging from the GEMS survey with redshifts and rest-frame quantities from COMBO-17 to study the evolution of morphologically early-type galaxies with red colors since z=1. We use a new large sample of 728 galaxies with centrally-concentrated radial profiles (Sersic n>2.5) and rest-frame U-V colors on the red sequence. By appropriate comparison with the local relations from SDSS, we find that the luminosity-size (L-R) and stellar mass-size (M-R) relations evolve in a manner that is consistent with the passive aging of ancient stars. By itself, this result is consistent with a completely passive evolution of the red early-type galaxy population. If instead, as demonstrated by a number of recent surveys, the early-type galaxy population builds up in mass by a factor of 2 since z=1, our results imply that new additions to the early-type galaxy population follow similar L-R and M-R correlations, compared to the older subset of early-type galaxies. Adding early-type galaxies to the red sequence through disk fading appears to be consistent with the data. Through comparison with models, the role of dissipationless merging is limited to <1 major merger on average since z=1 for the most massive galaxies. Predictions from models of gas-rich mergers are not yet mature enough to allow a detailed comparison to our observations. We find tentative evidence that the amount of luminosity evolution depends on galaxy stellar mass, such that the least massive galaxies show stronger luminosity evolution compared to more massive early types. This could reflect a different origin of low-mass early-type galaxies and/or younger stellar populations; the present data is insufficient to discriminate between these possibilities. (abridged)
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0411772
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