The Stripe 82 Massive Galaxy Project III: A Lack of Growth Among Massive Galaxies
Kevin Bundy (1, 2), Alexie Leauthaud (2), Shun Saito (3), Claudia, Maraston (4), David A. Wake (5), Daniel Thomas (4) ((1) UCO, (2) UCSC, (3), MPA, (4) Portsmouth, (5) Open University)

TL;DR
This study uses a large galaxy sample from Stripe 82 to investigate stellar mass growth in massive galaxies since z~0.65, finding no significant growth and highlighting differential evolution based on star formation activity.
Contribution
It provides the first large-volume, statistically robust measurement showing no stellar mass growth in massive galaxies over the studied redshift range.
Findings
No detectable growth in typical Mstar of massive galaxies (~9% uncertainty)
Evidence of differential evolution based on star formation activity
Residual star-forming galaxies become more prominent at higher masses
Abstract
The average stellar mass (Mstar) of high-mass galaxies (Mstar > 3e11 Msun) is expected to grow by ~30% since z~1, largely through ongoing mergers that are also invoked to explain the observed increase in galaxy sizes. Direct evidence for the corresponding growth in stellar mass has been elusive, however, in part because the volumes sampled by previous redshift surveys have been too small to yield reliable statistics. In this work, we make use of the Stripe 82 Massive Galaxy Catalog to build a mass-limited sample of 41,770 galaxies (Mstar > 1.6e11) with optical to near-IR photometry and a large fraction (>55%) of spectroscopic redshifts. Our sample spans 139 square degrees, significantly larger than most previous efforts. After accounting for a number of potential systematic errors, including the effects of Mstar scatter, we measure galaxy stellar mass functions over 0.3 < z < 0.65 and…
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