The Relation Between Compact, Quiescent High Redshift Galaxies and Massive Nearby Elliptical Galaxies: Evidence for Hierarchical, Inside-Out Growth
Rachel Bezanson, Pieter G. van Dokkum, Tomer Tal, Danilo Marchesini,, Mariska Kriek, Marijn Franx, Paolo Coppi

TL;DR
This study compares high-redshift compact quiescent galaxies with local ellipticals, supporting inside-out growth through minor mergers, and constrains their evolutionary pathways and black hole relations.
Contribution
It provides evidence for hierarchical, inside-out growth of elliptical galaxies, quantifies size and density evolution, and models galaxy growth via minor mergers.
Findings
High-redshift galaxies are much denser within effective radius.
Density within 1 kpc is only 2-3 times higher at high redshift.
Size growth is consistent with minor merger models.
Abstract
Recent studies have shown that massive quiescent galaxies at high redshift are much more compact than present-day galaxies of the same mass. Here we compare the radial stellar density profiles and the number density of a sample of massive galaxies at z ~ 2.3 to nearby massive elliptical galaxies. We confirm that the average stellar densities of the z ~ 2.3 galaxies within the effective radius, rho(<r_e), are two orders of magnitude higher than those of local elliptical galaxies of the same stellar mass. However, we also find that the densities measured within a constant physical radius of 1 kpc, rho(<1 kpc), are higher by a factor of 2-3 only. This suggests that inside-out growth scenarios are plausible, in which the compact high redshift galaxies make up the centers of normal nearby ellipticals. The compact galaxies are common at high redshift, which enables us to further constrain…
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