Larger sizes of massive quiescent early-type galaxies in clusters than in the field at 0.8 < z < 1.5
L. Delaye, M. Huertas-Company, S. Mei, C. Lidman, R. Licitra, A., Newman, A. Raichoor, F. Shankar, F. Barrientos, M. Bernardi, P. Cerulo, W., Couch, R. Demarco, R. Mu\~noz, R. Sanchez-Janssen, M. Tanaka

TL;DR
This study shows that quiescent early-type galaxies in clusters at 0.8<z<1.5 are significantly larger than their field counterparts, indicating environment influences galaxy size evolution during this epoch.
Contribution
It provides a large, comparative analysis of galaxy sizes in clusters versus the field at high redshift, revealing environment-dependent size differences and evolution patterns.
Findings
Cluster ETGs are 30-50% larger than field ETGs at the same stellar mass.
Size evolution at fixed mass is less steep in clusters than in the field.
Size differences are mainly driven by galaxies in cluster cores.
Abstract
[abridged] The mass-size relation of early-type galaxies (ETGs) has been largely studied in the last years to probe the mass assembly of the most massive objects in the Universe. In this paper, we focus on the mass-size relation of quiescent massive ETGs (Mstar/Msol > 3*10^10) living in massive clusters (M200 ~ 10^14 Mstar) at 0.8< z <1.5, as compared to those living in the field at the same epoch. Our sample contains ~ 400 ETGs in clusters and the same number in the field. Therefore, our sample is approximately an order of magnitude larger than previous studies in the same redshift range for galaxy clusters. We find that ETGs living in clusters are between ~30-50% larger than galaxies with the same stellar mass residing in the field. We parametrize the size using the mass-normalized size, gamma=Re/Mstar^0.57. The gamma distributions in both environments peak at the same position but…
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