Clumpy Galaxies in CANDELS. I. The Definition of UV Clumps and the Fraction of Clumpy Galaxies at 0.5<z<3
Yicheng Guo, Henry C. Ferguson, Eric F. Bell, David C. Koo,, Christopher J. Conselice, Mauro Giavalisco, Susan Kassin, Yu Lu, Ray Lucas,, Nir Mandelker, Daniel M. McIntosh, Joel R. Primack, Swara Ravindranath,, Guillermo Barro, Daniel Ceverino, Avishai Dekel, Sandra M. Faber

TL;DR
This study defines UV-bright star-forming clumps in galaxies at 0.5<z<3, analyzing their demographics, evolution, and origins, revealing mass-dependent trends and implications for galaxy formation theories.
Contribution
It introduces a clear physical definition of UV clumps and provides comprehensive measurements of their prevalence and contribution across different galaxy masses and redshifts.
Findings
Low-mass galaxies have a constant 60% clumpy fraction from z~3 to 0.5.
Massive galaxies' clumpy fraction decreases from 55% to 15% over the same redshift range.
Disk stabilization and mergers explain the observed clumpy fraction trends in different mass regimes.
Abstract
Although giant clumps of stars are crucial to galaxy formation and evolution, the most basic demographics of clumps are still uncertain, mainly because the definition of clumps has not been thoroughly discussed. In this paper, we study the basic demographics of clumps in star-forming galaxies (SFGs) at 0.5<z<3, using our proposed physical definition that UV-bright clumps are discrete star-forming regions that individually contribute more than 8% of the rest-frame UV light of their galaxies. Clumps defined this way are significantly brighter than the HII regions of nearby large spiral galaxies, either individually or blended, when physical spatial resolution and cosmological dimming are considered. Under this definition, we measure the fraction of SFGs that contain at least one off-center clump (Fclumpy) and the contributions of clumps to the rest-frame UV light and star formation rate…
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