Clumpy Galaxies in CANDELS. II. Physical Properties of UV-bright Clumps at $0.5\leq z<3$
Yicheng Guo, Marc Rafelski, Eric F. Bell, Christopher J. Conselice,, Avishai Dekel, S. M. Faber, Mauro Giavalisco, Anton M. Koekemoer, David C., Koo, Yu Lu, Nir Mandelker, Joel R. Primack, Daniel Ceverino, Duilia F. de, Mello, Henry C. Ferguson, Nimish Hathi, Dale Kocevski

TL;DR
This study analyzes the physical properties of UV-bright star-forming clumps in distant galaxies between redshifts 0.5 and 3, revealing how their characteristics vary with location, redshift, and galaxy mass to inform galaxy formation theories.
Contribution
It provides a large, systematically analyzed sample of galaxy clumps with measured properties, establishing a benchmark for comparing observations with galaxy formation simulations.
Findings
Clumps near galaxy centers are redder than those in outskirts.
Color gradient slopes depend on redshift and galaxy mass.
Color gradients are explained by age, dust, and star formation rate variations.
Abstract
Studying giant star-forming clumps in distant galaxies is important to understand galaxy formation and evolution. At present, however, observers and theorists have not reached a consensus on whether the observed "clumps" in distant galaxies are the same phenomenon that is seen in simulations. In this paper, as a step to establish a benchmark of direct comparisons between observations and theories, we publish a sample of clumps constructed to represent the commonly observed "clumps" in the literature. This sample contains 3193 clumps detected from 1270 galaxies at . The clumps are detected from rest-frame UV images, as described in our previous paper. Their physical properties, e.g., rest-frame color, stellar mass (M*), star formation rate (SFR), age, and dust extinction, are measured by fitting the spectral energy distribution (SED) to synthetic stellar population…
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