The Morphologies of Massive Galaxies at 1<z<3 in the CANDELS-UDS Field: Compact Bulges, and the Rise and Fall of Massive Disks
V.A. Bruce, J.S. Dunlop, M. Cirasuolo, R.J. McLure, T.A. Targett, E.F., Bell, D.J. Croton, A. Dekel, S.M. Faber, H.C. Ferguson, N.A. Grogin, D.D., Kocevski, A.M. Koekemoer, D.C. Koo, K. Lai, J.M. Lotz, E.J. McGrath, J.A., Newman, A. van der Wel

TL;DR
This study uses deep HST imaging to analyze the morphologies of massive galaxies at 1<z<3, revealing size evolution, morphological bimodality, and star formation activity patterns that inform galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It provides detailed morphological analysis of high-z massive galaxies, highlighting size evolution, bimodality, and the relationship between star formation and galaxy structure.
Findings
Massive galaxies at 1<z<3 are smaller than local counterparts.
Bimodality in size-mass relation increases with redshift.
Disk-dominated galaxies at high z are often actively star-forming.
Abstract
We have used deep, HST, near-IR imaging to study the morphological properties of the most massive galaxies at high z, modelling the WFC3/IR H-band images of the ~200 galaxies in the CANDELS-UDS field with 1 < z_phot < 3, and stellar masses M_star > 10^11 M_sun. We have used both single-Sersic and bulge+disk models, have investigated the errors/biases introduced by uncertainties in the background and the PSF, and have obtained formally-acceptable model fits to >90% of the galaxies. Our results indicate that these massive galaxies at 1 < z < 3 lie both on and below the local size-mass relation, with a median R_e~2.6 kpc, a factor of ~2.3 smaller than comparably-massive local galaxies. Moreover, we find that bulge-dominated objects in particular show evidence for a growing bimodality in the size-mass relation with increasing z, and by z > 2 the compact bulges display effective radii a…
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