Deep MUSE observations in the HDFS. Morpho-kinematics of distant star-forming galaxies down to $10^8$M$_\odot$
T. Contini, B. Epinat, N. Bouch\'e, J. Brinchmann, L. A. Boogaard, E., Ventou, R. Bacon, J. Richard, P. M. Weilbacher, L. Wisotzki, D. Krajnovi\'c,, J-B. Vielfaure, E. Emsellem, H. Finley, H. Inami, J. Schaye, M. Swinbank, A., Gu\'erou, T. Martinsson, L. Michel-Dansac

TL;DR
This study uses deep VLT/MUSE observations of the Hubble Deep Field South to analyze the morpho-kinematics of low-mass, distant star-forming galaxies, revealing their disk-like rotation and evolutionary links to local galaxy scaling relations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed kinematic analysis of low-mass galaxies at intermediate redshift using 3D spectroscopy, extending scaling relations to lower masses and exploring galaxy evolution.
Findings
Most galaxies exhibit disk-like rotation.
20% have high velocity dispersions indicating turbulence or interactions.
Galaxies show a continuum from spiral to elliptical scaling relations.
Abstract
(Abridged) We make use of the deepest VLT/MUSE observations performed so far on the Hubble Deep Field South (HDFS) to characterize the low-mass (< M) galaxy population at intermediate redshift. We identify a sample of 28 spatially-resolved emission-line galaxies in the deep (27h integration time) MUSE data cube, spread over a redshift interval of 0.2 < z < 1.4. The public HST images and multi-band photometry over the HDFS are used to constrain the stellar mass and star formation rate (SFR) of the galaxies and to perform a morphological analysis. We derive the resolved ionized gas properties of these galaxies from the MUSE data and model the disk (both in 2D and with GalPaK) to retrieve their intrinsic gas kinematics. We build a sample of resolved emission-line galaxies of much lower stellar mass and SFR (by 1-2 orders of magnitude) than previous 3D…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
