MOIRCS Deep Survey. VII: NIR Morphologies of Star-forming Galaxies at Redshift z~1
Masahiro Konishi, Masayuki Akiyama, Masaru Kajisawa, Takashi Ichikawa,, Ryuji Suzuki, Chihiro Tokoku, Yuka Katsuno Uchimoto, Tomohiro Yoshikawa, Ichi, Tanaka, Masato Onodera, Masami Ouchi, Koji Omata, Tetsuo Nishimura, Toru, Yamada

TL;DR
This study analyzes the near-infrared morphologies of star-forming galaxies at z~1, revealing that most luminous infrared galaxies are disk-like and actively building their structures during a peak epoch of star formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed morphological analysis of z~1 LIRGs using deep NIR imaging, highlighting their disk-like nature and size evolution compared to local galaxies.
Findings
90% of LIRGs at z~1 are disk-like in NIR morphology
z~1 disk-like galaxies are similar in size to local counterparts
z~1 galaxies exhibit steeper color gradients than local galaxies
Abstract
We investigate rest-frame near-infrared (NIR) morphologies of a sample of 139 galaxies with M_{s} >= 1 x 10^{10} M_{sun} at z=0.8-1.2 in the GOODS-North field using our deep NIR imaging data (MOIRCS Deep Survey, MODS). We focus on Luminous Infrared Galaxies (LIRGs), which dominate high star formation rate (SFR) density at z~1, in the sample identified by cross-correlating with the Spitzer/MIPS 24um source catalog. We perform two-dimensional light profile fitting of the z~1 galaxies in the Ks-band (rest-frame J-band) with a single component Sersic model. We find that at z~1, ~90% of LIRGs have low Sersic indices (n<2.5, similar to disk-like galaxies) in the Ks-band, and those disk-like LIRGs consist of ~60% of the whole disk-like sample above M_{s} >= 3 x 10^{10} M_{sun}. The z~1 disk-like LIRGs are comparable or ~20% small at a maximum in size compared to local disk-like galaxies in the…
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