Towards a census of super-compact massive galaxies in the Kilo Degree Survey
C. Tortora, F. La Barbera, N.R. Napolitano, N. Roy, M. Radovich, S., Cavuoti, M. Brescia, G. Longo, F. Getman, M. Capaccioli, L. Grado, K.H., Kuijken, J. T. A. de Jong, J. P. McFarland, E. Puddu

TL;DR
This study conducts the first comprehensive census of super-compact massive galaxies in the KiDS survey, identifying 92 candidates and analyzing their properties to inform galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides the first catalog of super-compact massive galaxies in KiDS, using multi-band imaging, photometric redshifts, and visual inspection to refine candidate selection.
Findings
92 candidate super-compact massive galaxies identified.
Number density mildly matches simulation predictions at z>0.2.
Candidates show negative internal colour gradients.
Abstract
The abundance of compact, massive, early-type galaxies (ETGs) provides important constraints to galaxy formation scenarios. Thanks to the area covered, depth, excellent spatial resolution and seeing, the ESO Public optical Kilo Degree Survey (KiDS), carried out with the VLT Survey Telescope (VST), offers a unique opportunity to conduct a complete census of the most compact galaxies in the Universe. This paper presents a first census of such systems from the first 156 square degrees of KiDS. Our analysis relies on g-, r-, and i-band effective radii (), derived by fitting galaxy images with PSF-convolved S\'ersic models, high-quality photometric redshifts, , estimated from machine learning techniques, and stellar masses, , calculated from KiDS aperture photometry. After massiveness () and compactness…
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