Galaxy sizes and the galaxy-halo connection -- I: the remarkable tightness of the size distributions
Lorenzo Zanisi, Francesco Shankar, Andrea Lapi, Nicola Menci,, Mariangela Bernardi, Christopher Duckworth, Marc Huertas-Company, Philip, Grylls, Paolo Salucci

TL;DR
This paper investigates the relationship between galaxy sizes and their dark matter halos, revealing an unexpectedly tight correlation that challenges existing models and suggests a key role for stellar angular momentum in galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides robust constraints on the size-halo relation using SDSS data, highlighting the need for models to incorporate stellar angular momentum to explain galaxy size distributions.
Findings
Galaxy size distributions are extremely tight, especially for massive galaxies.
Models based solely on angular momentum conservation predict wider size distributions.
The size-halo relation is mediated by stellar specific angular momentum, not just halo properties.
Abstract
The mass and structural assembly of galaxies is a matter of intense debate. Current theoretical models predict the existence of a linear relationship between galaxy size () and the host dark matter halo virial radius ().\\ By making use of semi-empirical models compared to the size distributions of central galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, we provide robust constraints on the normalization and scatter of the relation. We explore the parameter space of models in which the relation is mediated by either the spin parameter or the concentration of the host halo, or a simple constant the nature of which is in principle unknown. We find that the data require extremely tight relations for both early-type and late-type galaxies (ETGs,LTGs), especially for more massive galaxies. These constraints challenge models based solely on angular momentum…
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