The MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Field Survey: V. Spatially resolved stellar kinematics of galaxies at redshift $0.2\lesssim z \lesssim 0.8$
Adrien Guerou, Davor Krajnovic, Benoit Epinat, Thierry Contini, Eric, Emsellem, Nicolas Bouche, Roland Bacon, Leo Michel-Dansac, Johan Richard,, Peter M. Weilbacher, Joop Schaye, Raffaella Anna Marino, Mark den Brok,, Santiago Erroz-Ferrer

TL;DR
This study presents the first spatially resolved stellar kinematic maps for intermediate redshift galaxies, revealing that disk galaxy kinematics similar to local universe are already established 4-7 billion years ago, with implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed stellar kinematic maps at intermediate redshifts and compares stellar and gas kinematics, demonstrating early disk stability and mass distribution.
Findings
Most galaxies show rotating stellar disks with constant velocity dispersions.
Gas and stellar kinematics are consistent, tracing the gravitational potential.
Dynamical masses agree within 25% with simple disk models.
Abstract
We present spatially resolved stellar kinematic maps, for the first time, for a sample of 17 intermediate redshift galaxies (0.2 < z < 0.8). We used deep MUSE/VLT integral field spectroscopic observations in the Hubble Deep Field South (HDFS) and Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF), resulting from ~30h integration time per field, each covering 1'x1' field of view, with ~0.65" spatial resolution. We selected all galaxies brighter than 25mag in the I band and for which the stellar continuum is detected over an area that is at least two times larger than the spatial resolution. The resulting sample contains mostly late-type disk, main-sequence star-forming galaxies with 10^8.5 - 10^10.5 Msun. Using a full-spectrum fitting technique, we derive two-dimensional maps of the stellar and gas kinematics, including the radial velocity V and velocity dispersion sigma. We find that most galaxies in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
