One Plane for All: Massive Star-Forming and Quiescent Galaxies Lie on the Same Mass Fundamental Plane at z~0 and z~0.7
Rachel Bezanson, Marijn Franx, and Pieter van Dokkum

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that both star-forming and quiescent massive galaxies at z~0 and z~0.7 lie on a common mass fundamental plane, indicating a universal structural and dynamical relation across different galaxy types and cosmic epochs.
Contribution
It reveals that the mass fundamental plane unifies diverse galaxy populations across redshifts, extending previous findings to include star-forming galaxies at z~0.7.
Findings
Star-forming and quiescent galaxies share the same fundamental plane.
The scatter in the relation is low, indicating a tight correlation.
The fundamental plane's stability suggests minimal bias from galaxy evolution.
Abstract
Scaling relations between galaxy structures and dynamics have been studied extensively for early and late-type galaxies, both in the local universe and at high redshifts. The abundant differences between the properties of disky and elliptical, or star-forming and quiescent, galaxies seem to be characteristic of the local Universe; such clear distinctions begin to disintegrate as observations of massive galaxies probe higher redshifts. In this Paper, we investigate the existence the mass fundamental plane of all massive galaxies ( 100 km/s). This work includes local galaxies (0.05<z<0.07) from the SDSS, in addition to 31 star-forming and 72 quiescent massive galaxies at intermediate redshift (z~0.7) with absorption line kinematics from deep Keck-DEIMOS spectra and structural parameters from HST imaging. In two parameter scaling relations, star-forming and quiescent…
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