The Size Evolution of Star-forming and Quenched Galaxies in the IllustrisTNG simulation
Shy Genel, Dylan Nelson, Annalisa Pillepich, Volker Springel, Ruediger, Pakmor, Rainer Weinberger, Lars Hernquist, Jill Naiman, Mark Vogelsberger,, Federico Marinacci, and Paul Torrey

TL;DR
This study uses the IllustrisTNG simulation to analyze the size evolution of star-forming and quenched galaxies, finding that size growth mainly occurs before quenching, with quenched galaxies showing limited growth afterward.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of galaxy size evolution between star-forming and quenched populations, highlighting the different growth patterns and their timing.
Findings
Quenched galaxies grow little in size before quenching.
Main-sequence galaxies grow steadily in size over time.
Size differences between populations persist down to z=0.
Abstract
We analyze scaling relations and evolution histories of galaxy sizes in TNG100, part of the IllustrisTNG simulation suite. Observational qualitative trends of size with stellar mass, star-formation rate and redshift are reproduced, and a quantitative comparison of projected r-band sizes at 0~<z<~2 shows agreement to much better than 0.25dex. We follow populations of z=0 galaxies with a range of masses backwards in time along their main progenitor branches, distinguishing between main-sequence and quenched galaxies. Our main findings are as follows. (i) At M_{*,z=0}>~10^{9.5}Msun, the evolution of the median main progenitor differs, with quenched galaxies hardly growing in median size before quenching, whereas main-sequence galaxies grow their median size continuously, thus opening a gap from the progenitors of quenched galaxies. This is partly because the main-sequence high-redshift…
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