What determines the sizes of red early-type galaxies?
Joon Hyeop Lee (1), Minjin Kim (1,2), Chang Hee Ree (1), Sang Chul Kim, (1), Jong Chul Lee (1), Hye-Ran Lee (1,3), Hyunjin Jeong (1), Kwang-Il Seon, (1), Jaemann Kyeong (1), Kyuseok Oh (4) ((1) Korea Astronomy, Space, Science Institute, Korea

TL;DR
This study investigates the factors influencing the sizes of red early-type galaxies, revealing that luminosity, mass, colors, and merger history play significant roles in size variations across different galaxy mass ranges.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed analysis of how luminosity, mass, and other parameters affect galaxy sizes, highlighting the roles of minor mergers, rotations, and dry mergers in size evolution.
Findings
Faint galaxy sizes are more affected by luminosity.
Bright galaxy sizes are primarily influenced by dynamical mass.
Size variations are linked to recent mergers and rotational dynamics.
Abstract
The sizes of galaxies are known to be closely related with their masses, luminosities, redshifts and morphologies. However, when we fix these quantities and morphology, we still find large dispersions in the galaxy size distribution. We investigate the origin of these dispersions for red early-type galaxies, using two SDSS-based catalogs. We find that the sizes of faint galaxies (log(M_dyn/M_sun) < 10.3 or M_r > -19.5, where M_r is the r-band absolute magnitude, k-corrected to z = 0.1) are affected more significantly by luminosity, while the sizes of bright galaxies (log(M_dyn/M_sun) > 11.4 or M_r < -21.4) are by dynamical mass. At fixed mass and luminosity, the sizes of low-mass galaxies (log(M_dyn/M_sun) ~ 10.45 and M_r ~ -19.8) are relatively less sensitive to their colors, color gradients and axis ratios. On the other hand, the sizes of intermediate-mass (log(M_dyn/M_sun) ~ 10.85…
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