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The Kormendy relation of massive elliptical galaxies at z~1.5. Evidence for size evolution ?

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 Added by Paolo Saracco
 Publication date 2006
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We present the morphological analysis based on HST-NIC2 (0.075 arcsec/pixel) images in the F160W filter of a sample of 9 massive field (> 10^{11} M_odot) galaxies spectroscopically classified as early-types at 1.2<z<1.7. Our analysis shows that all of them are bulge dominated systems. In particular, 6 of them are well fitted by a de Vaucouleurs profile (n=4) suggesting that they can be considered pure elliptical galaxies. The remaining 3 galaxies are better fitted by a Sersic profile with index 1.9<n<2.3 suggesting that a disk-like component could contribute up to 30% to the total light of these galaxies. We derived the effective radius R_e and the mean surface brightness <mu_e> within R_e of our galaxies and we compared them with those of early-types at lower redshifts. We find that the surface brightness <mu_e> of our galaxies should get fainter by 2.5 mag from z~1.5 to z~0 to match the surface brightness of the local ellipticals with comparable R_e, i.e. the local Kormendy relation. Luminosity evolution without morphological changes can only explain half of this effect, as the maximum dimming expected for an elliptical galaxy is ~1.6 mag in this redshift range. Thus, other parameters, possibly structural, may undergo evolution and play an important role in reconciling models and observations. Hypothesizing an evolution of the effective radius of galaxies we find that R_e should increase by a factor 1.5 from z~1.5 to z~0.

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131 - Ivana Damjanov 2009
We present the results of NICMOS imaging of a sample of 16 high mass passively evolving galaxies with 1.3<z<2, taken primarily from the Gemini Deep Deep Survey. Around 80% of galaxies in our sample have spectra dominated by stars with ages >1 Gyr. Our rest-frame R-band images show that most of these objects have compact regular morphologies which follow the classical R^1/4 law. These galaxies scatter along a tight sequence in the Kormendy relation. Around one-third of the massive red objects are extraordinarily compact, with effective radii under one kiloparsec. Our NICMOS observations allow the detection of such systems more robustly than is possible with optical (rest-frame UV) data, and while similar systems have been seen at z>2, this is the first time such systems have been detected in a rest-frame optical survey at 1.3<z<2. We refer to these compact galaxies as red nuggets. Similarly compact massive galaxies are completely absent in the nearby Universe. We introduce a new stellar mass Kormendy relation (stellar mass density vs size) which isolates the effects of size evolution from those of luminosity and color evolution. The 1.1 < z < 2 passive galaxies have mass densities that are an order of magnitude larger then early type galaxies today and are comparable to the compact distant red galaxies at 2 < z < 3. We briefly consider mechanisms for size evolution in contemporary models focusing on equal-mass mergers and adiabatic expansion driven by stellar mass loss. Neither of these mechanisms appears able to transform the high-redshift Kormendy relation into its local counterpart. <ABRIDGED>
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