Dynamical masses of early-type galaxies at z~2: Are they truly superdense?
Michele Cappellari, S. di Serego Alighieri, A. Cimatti, E. Daddi, A., Renzini, J. D. Kurk, P. Cassata, M. Dickinson, A. Franceschini, M. Mignoli,, L. Pozzetti, G. Rodighiero, P. Rosati, G. Zamorani

TL;DR
This study measures stellar velocity dispersions and dynamical masses of massive early-type galaxies at z~2, finding they are more dense than local counterparts but consistent with passive evolution and suggesting a bottom-light IMF.
Contribution
It provides detailed dynamical modeling of high-redshift ETGs, comparing various mass estimates, and discusses implications for galaxy density and IMF evolution.
Findings
Dynamical masses agree within ~30% with virial estimates.
Galaxies are more dense than local counterparts.
A bottom-light IMF is favored at z~2.
Abstract
We measured stellar velocity dispersions sigma and dynamical masses of 9 massive (M~10^11 Msun) early-type galaxies (ETG) from the GMASS sample at redshift 1.4<z<2.0. The sigma are based on individual spectra for two galaxies at z~1.4 and on a stacked spectrum for 7 galaxies with 1.6<z<2.0, with 202-h of exposure at the ESO Very Large Telescope. We constructed detailed axisymmetric dynamical models for the objects, based on the Jeans equations, taking the observed surface brightness (from deep HST/ACS observations), PSF and slit effects into account. Our dynamical masses M_Jeans agree within ~30% with virial estimates M_vir=5*Re*sigma^2/G, although the latter tend to be smaller. This suggests that sizes are not underestimated by more than a similar fraction. Our M_Jeans also agrees within a factor <2 with the M_pop previously derived using stellar population models and 11 bands…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
