Structure and star formation in galaxies out to z=3: evidence for surface density dependent evolution and upsizing
Marijn Franx, Pieter G. van Dokkum, Natascha M. Foerster Schreiber,, Stijn Wuyts, Ivo Labbe, Sune Toft

TL;DR
This study analyzes galaxy evolution up to redshift 3, revealing surface density-dependent star formation, size evolution, and the persistence of structural relations similar to the Hubble sequence.
Contribution
It provides new evidence linking surface density to star formation and demonstrates significant galaxy upsizing over cosmic time, extending the structural relations to high redshift.
Findings
Galaxies with high surface density are red and quiescent at low z.
Galaxy sizes evolve approximately as (1+z)^-0.59.
Star forming galaxies at z>=1.5 have high gas fractions and short star formation timescales.
Abstract
We present an analysis of galaxies in the CDF-South. We find a tight relation to z=3 between color and size at a given mass, with red galaxies being small, and blue galaxies being large. We show that the relation is driven by stellar surface density or inferred velocity dispersion: galaxies with high surface density are red and have low specific star formation rates, and galaxies with low surface density are blue and have high specific star formation rates. Surface density and inferred velocity dispersion are better correlated with specific star formation rate and color than stellar mass. Hence stellar mass by itself is not a good predictor of the star formation history of galaxies. In general, galaxies at a given surface density have higher specific star formation rates at higher redshift. Specifically, galaxies with a surface density of 1-3 10^9 Msun/kpc^2 are "red and dead" at low…
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