Spatially Resolved Stellar Kinematics from LEGA-C: Increased Rotational Support in z~0.8 Quiescent Galaxies
Rachel Bezanson, Arjen van der Wel, Camilla Pacifici, Kai Noeske,, Ivana Bari\v{s}i\'c, Eric F. Bell, Gabriel B. Brammer, Joao Calhau, Priscilla, Chauke, Pieter van Dokkum, Marijn Franx, Anna Gallazzi, Josha van Houdt, Ivo, Labb\'e, Michael V. Maseda, Juan Carlos Mu\~nos-Mateos

TL;DR
This study measures stellar rotation and velocity dispersion in quiescent galaxies at z~0.8, revealing increased rotational support in earlier epochs and suggesting angular momentum loss over time.
Contribution
First to analyze the dynamical state of quiescent galaxies at z~0.8 using spatially resolved kinematics from LEGA-C, showing evolution in rotational support since z~1.
Findings
Less massive galaxies show significant rotation, unlike the most massive ones.
Rotational support has decreased from z~0.8 to the present day.
Quiescent galaxies lose angular momentum over time, likely through mergers.
Abstract
We present stellar rotation curves and velocity dispersion profiles for 104 quiescent galaxies at from the Large Early Galaxy Astrophysics Census (LEGA-C) spectroscopic survey. Rotation is typically probed across 10-20kpc, or to an average of 2.7. Combined with central stellar velocity dispersions () this provides the first determination of the dynamical state of a sample selected by a lack of star formation activity at large lookback time. The most massive galaxies () generally show no or little rotation measured at 5kpc ( in 8 of 10 cases), while of less massive galaxies show significant rotation. This is reminiscent of local fast- and slow-rotating ellipticals and implies that low- and high-redshift quiescent galaxies have qualitatively similar dynamical structures. We compare…
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