Structural evolution in massive galaxies at z~2
Ken-ichi Tadaki, Sirio Belli, Andreas Burkert, Avishai Dekel, Natascha, M. F\"orster Schreiber, Reinhard Genzel, Masao Hayashi, Rodrigo, Herrera-Camus, Tadayuki Kodama, Kotaro Kohno, Yusei Koyama, Minju M. Lee,, Dieter Lutz, Lamiya Mowla, Erica J. Nelson, Alvio Renzini

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to analyze the size and evolution of star-forming regions in massive galaxies at z~2, revealing compact FIR emission and potential inside-out transformation into quiescent galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurements of FIR sizes in massive SFGs at z~2 and proposes an outside-in evolution scenario based on spatial distribution analysis.
Findings
FIR emission regions are significantly smaller than optical and stellar mass regions.
A substantial fraction of SFGs can develop dense cores within 300 Myr.
Results support an outside-in galaxy transformation process.
Abstract
We present 0.2arcsec-resolution Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations at 870 m in a stellar mass-selected sample of 85 massive () star-forming galaxies (SFGs) at z=1.9-2.6 in the 3D-HST/CANDELS fields of UDS and GOODS-S. We measure the effective radius of the rest-frame far-infrared (FIR) emission for 62 massive SFGs. They are distributed over wide ranges of FIR size from 0.4 kpc to 6 kpc. The effective radius of the FIR emission is smaller by a factor of 2.3 than the effective radius of the optical emission and by a factor of 1.9 smaller than the half-mass radius. Even with taking into account potential extended components, the FIR size would change by ~10%. By combining the spatial distributions of the FIR and optical emission, we investigate how galaxies…
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