On the Dearth of Compact, Massive, Red Sequence Galaxies in the Local Universe
Edward N Taylor, Marijn Franx, Karl Glazebrook, Jarle Brinchmann,, Arjen van der Wel, Pieter G van Dokkum

TL;DR
This study investigates the scarcity of compact, massive, red galaxies in the local universe, finding that such galaxies are extremely rare and likely undergo significant size evolution since z > 2, challenging merger-driven models.
Contribution
The paper provides the first comprehensive search for local analogs to high-redshift compact galaxies using SDSS data, and concludes that their evolution cannot be solely explained by major mergers.
Findings
Very few compact, massive galaxies are found locally.
The number density of such galaxies decreases by over 5000 from z > 2 to now.
Major mergers are unlikely to be the main mechanism for size evolution.
Abstract
Using data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS; data release 7), we have conducted a search for local analogs to the extremely compact, massive, quiescent galaxies that have been identified at z > 2. We show that incompleteness is a concern for such compact galaxies, particularly for low redshifts (z < ~0.05) as a result of the SDSS spectroscopic target selection algorithm. We have identified 63 massive red sequence galaxies at 0.066 < z < 0.12 that are smaller than the median size-mass relation by a factor of 2 or more. Consistent with expectations from the virial theorem, the median offset from the mass-velocity dispersion relation for these galaxies is 0.12 dex. We do not find any galaxies with sizes and masses comparable to those observed at z ~ 2, implying a decrease in the comoving number density (at fixed size and mass) by a factor of > 5000. This result cannot be explained…
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