HST/WFC3 Confirmation of the Inside-Out Growth of Massive Galaxies at 0<z<2 and Identification of their Star Forming Progenitors at z~3
Shannon G. Patel, Pieter G. van Dokkum, Marijn Franx, Ryan F. Quadri,, Adam Muzzin, Danilo Marchesini, Rik J. Williams, Bradford P. Holden, Mauro, Stefanon

TL;DR
This study uses HST imaging to trace the structural evolution of massive galaxies from z~3 to z~0, revealing inside-out growth driven by minor mergers and the transformation of star-forming disks into quiescent galaxies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of how massive galaxies grow in size and mass over cosmic time, emphasizing the inside-out growth pattern and the role of minor mergers.
Findings
Mass increases by a factor of ~3 from z~3 to z~0.
Size remains constant from z~3 to z~2, then grows rapidly.
Most mass within 2 kpc was in place by z~2.
Abstract
We study the structural evolution of massive galaxies by linking progenitors and descendants at a constant cumulative number density of n_c=1.4x10^{-4} Mpc^{-3} to z~3. Structural parameters were measured by fitting Sersic profiles to high resolution CANDELS HST WFC3 J_{125} and H_{160} imaging in the UKIDSS-UDS at 1<z<3 and ACS I_{814} imaging in COSMOS at 0.25<z<1. At a given redshift, we selected the HST band that most closely samples a common rest-frame wavelength so as to minimize systematics from color gradients in galaxies. At fixed n_c, galaxies grow in stellar mass by a factor of ~3 from z~3 to z~0. The size evolution is complex: galaxies appear roughly constant in size from z~3 to z~2 and then grow rapidly to lower redshifts. The evolution in the surface mass density profiles indicates that most of the mass at r<2 kpc was in place by z~2, and that most of the new mass growth…
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