Stellar Kinematics of z~2 Galaxies and the Inside-Out Growth of Quiescent Galaxies
Jesse van de Sande, Mariska Kriek, Marijn Franx, Pieter G. van Dokkum,, Rachel Bezanson, Rychard J. Bouwens, Ryan F. Quadri, Hans-Walter Rix,, Rosalind E. Skelton

TL;DR
This study investigates the structural and kinematic evolution of massive quiescent galaxies from z~2 to the present, revealing inside-out growth driven by minor mergers and providing new measurements of galaxy dynamics at high redshift.
Contribution
It presents new stellar kinematic data for z~2 galaxies, doubling the sample size, and combines these with literature to confirm inside-out growth consistent with minor merger models.
Findings
Velocity dispersions are 1.6-2.1 times higher than local galaxies of similar mass.
Effective radius increases by a factor of ~2.8 from z~2 to z~0.
Mass density within 1 kpc decreases mildly (~2) over time.
Abstract
Using stellar kinematics measurements, we investigate the growth of massive, quiescent galaxies from z~2 to today. We present X-Shooter spectra from the UV to NIR and dynamical mass measurements of 5 quiescent massive (>10^11 Msun) galaxies at z~2. This triples the sample of z>1.5 galaxies with well constrained (dsigma <100 km/s) velocity dispersion measurements. From spectral population synthesis modeling we find that these galaxies have stellar ages that range from 0.5-2 Gyr, with no signs of ongoing star formation. We measure velocity dispersions (290-450 km/s) from absorption lines and find that they are 1.6-2.1 times higher than those of galaxies in the SDSS at the same mass. Sizes are measured using GALFIT from HST-WFC3 H160 and UDS K-band images. The dynamical masses correspond well to the SED based stellar masses, with dynamical masses that are ~15% higher. We find that…
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