The fundamental plane of EDisCS galaxies - The effect of size evolution
R.P. Saglia, P. Sanchez-Blazquez, R. Bender, L. Simard, V. Desai, A., Aragon-Salamanca, B. Milvang-Jensen, C. Halliday, P. Jablonka, S. Noll, B., Poggianti, D. I. Clowe, G. De Lucia, R. Pello, G. Rudnick, T. Valentinuzzi,, S. D. M. White, D. Zaritsky

TL;DR
This study examines the size and spectral evolution of early-type galaxies up to redshift 0.9, revealing significant size growth and velocity dispersion changes that influence the fundamental plane and mass-to-light ratio evolution.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of galaxy size and velocity dispersion evolution across different environments, accounting for progenitor bias, and refines understanding of the fundamental plane evolution.
Findings
Galaxy sizes decrease as (1+z)^{-1.0} for both clusters and field.
Stellar velocity dispersions increase with redshift at fixed mass.
Size evolution is milder when progenitor bias is considered.
Abstract
We study the evolution of spectral early-type galaxies in clusters, groups and the field up to redshift 0.9 using the EDisCS dataset. We measure Re, Ie, and sigma for 154 cluster and 68 field galaxies. We study the evolution of the zero point of the fundamental plane (FP) and confirm results in the literature, but now also for the low cluster velocity dispersion regime. The mass-to-light ratio varies as Delta log M/L_B=(-0.54+-0.01)z=(-1.61+-0.01)log(1+z) in clusters, independent of their velocity dispersion. The evolution is stronger (Delta log M/L_B=(-0.76+-0.01)z=(-2.27+-0.03)log(1+z)) for field galaxies. The FP residuals correlate with galaxy mass and become progressively negative at low masses. The effect is visible at z>=0.7 for cluster galaxies and at z>=0.5 for field galaxies. We investigate the size evolution of our galaxy sample. We find that the half-luminosity radius for a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
