The Redshift and Mass Dependence on the Formation of The Hubble Sequence at z>1 from CANDELS/UDS
Alice Mortlock, Christopher J. Conselice, William G. Hartley, Jamie R., Ownsworth, Caterina Lani, Asa F. L. Bluck, Omar Almaini, Kenneth Duncan,, Arjen van der Wel, Anton M. Koekemoer, Avishai Dekel, Romeel Dave, Harry C., Ferguson, Duilia F. de Mello, Jeffrey A. Newman

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of galaxy structures and morphologies from redshift 1 to 3, revealing how galaxy types change over time and with stellar mass, highlighting the importance of morphological downsizing.
Contribution
It provides a detailed classification of galaxy morphologies at high redshift and introduces a transition redshift dependent on stellar mass, emphasizing the need for improved classification schemes.
Findings
Peculiar galaxies dominate at z>2.
Higher mass galaxies settle into Hubble types earlier.
Morphological downsizing observed with mass and redshift.
Abstract
In this paper we present a detailed study of the structures and morphologies of a sample of 1188 massive galaxies with Mstar>10^10Msun between redshifts z=1-3 within the Ultra Deep Survey (UDS) region of the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) field. Using this sample we determine how galaxy structure and morphology evolve with time. We visually classify our sample into disks, ellipticals and peculiar systems and correct for redshift effects on our classifications through simulations. We find evolution in the fractions of galaxies at a given visual classification as a function of redshift. The peculiar population is dominant at z>2 with a substantial spheroid population, and a negligible disk population. We compute the transition redshift, ztrans, where the combined fraction of spheroids and disks is equal to that of peculiar galaxies, as…
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