Can Minor Merging Account for the Size Growth of Quiescent Galaxies? New Results from the CANDELS Survey
Andrew B. Newman, Richard S. Ellis, Kevin Bundy, and Tommaso Treu

TL;DR
This study investigates whether minor mergers can account for the size growth of quiescent galaxies from z~2 to the present, using deep infrared data to analyze galaxy sizes and merger rates.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence on minor merger rates and assesses their sufficiency in explaining galaxy size evolution over cosmic time.
Findings
Mean galaxy size increases by a factor of 3.5 from z~2 to z~0.4.
13-18% of quiescent galaxies have likely physical companions with mass ratios > 0.1.
Minor mergers can explain most size growth at z > 1, but not at higher redshifts.
Abstract
The presence of extremely compact galaxies at z~2 and their subsequent growth in physical size has been the cause of much puzzlement. We revisit the question using deep infrared Wide Field Camera 3 data to probe the rest-frame optical structure of 935 host galaxies selected with 0.4<z<2.5 and stellar masses M* > 10^10.7 Msol using optical and near-infrared photometry in the UKIRT Ultra Deep Survey and GOODS-South fields of the CANDELS survey. At each redshift, the most compact sources are those with little or no star formation, and we find that the mean size of these systems grows by a factor of 3.5 +- 0.3 over this redshift interval. The new data are sufficiently deep to enable us to identify companions to these hosts whose stellar masses are ten times smaller, while still yielding suitably accurate photometric redshifts to define a likely physical association. By searching for faint…
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