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We study the history from $zsim2$ to $zsim0$ of the stellar mass assembly of quiescent and star-forming galaxies in a spatially resolved fashion. For this purpose we use multi-wavelength imaging data from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) over the GOODS fields and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) for the local population. We present the radial stellar mass surface density profiles of galaxies with $M_{ast}>10^{10} M_{odot}$, corrected for mass-to-light ratio ($M_{ast}/L$) variations, and derive the half-mass radius ($R_{m}$), central stellar mass surface density within 1 kpc ($Sigma_{1}$) and surface density at $R_{m}$ ($Sigma_{m}$) for star-forming and quiescent galaxies and study their evolution with redshift. At fixed stellar mass, the half-mass sizes of quiescent galaxies increase from $zsim2$ to $zsim0$ by a factor of $sim3-5$, whereas the half-mass sizes of star-forming galaxies increase only slightly, by a factor of $sim2$. The central densities $Sigma_{1}$ of quiescent galaxies decline slightly (by a factor of $lesssim1.7$) from $zsim2$ to $zsim0$, while for star-forming galaxies $Sigma_{1}$ increases with time, at fixed mass. We show that the central density $Sigma_{1}$ has a tighter correlation with specific star-formation rate (sSFR) than $Sigma_{m}$ and for all masses and redshifts galaxies with higher central density are more prone to be quenched. Reaching a high central density ($Sigma_{1} gtrsim 10^{10} M_{odot} mathrm{kpc}^2$) seems to be a prerequisite for the cessation of star formation, though a causal link between high $Sigma_{1}$ and quenching is difficult to prove and their correlation can have a different origin.
How stellar mass assembles within galaxies is still an open question. We present measurements of the stellar mass distribution on kpc-scale for $sim5500$ galaxies with stellar masses above $log(M_{ast}/M_{odot})geqslant9.8$ up to the redshift $2.0$.
The growth of galaxies is a key problem in understanding the structure and evolution of the universe. Galaxies grow their stellar mass by a combination of star formation and mergers, with a relative importance that is redshift dependent. Theoretical
Using the science verification data of the Dark Energy Survey (DES) for a new sample of 106 X-Ray selected clusters and groups, we study the stellar mass growth of Bright Central Galaxies (BCGs) since redshift 1.2. Compared with the expectation in a
We investigate the relationship between the black hole accretion rate (BHAR) and star-formation rate (SFR) for Milky Way (MW) and Andromeda (M31)-mass progenitors from z = 0.2 - 2.5. We source galaxies from the Ks-band selected ZFOURGE survey, which
We highlight two research strands related to our ongoing chemodynamical Galactic Archaeology efforts: (i) the spatio-temporal infall rate of gas onto the disk, drawing analogies with the infall behaviour imposed by classical galactic chemical evoluti