Consistent dynamical and stellar masses with potential light IMF in massive quiescent galaxies at $3 < z < 4$ using velocity dispersions measurements with MOSFIRE
James Esdaile, Karl Glazebrook, Ivo Labbe, Edward Taylor, Corentin, Schreiber, Themiya Nanayakkara, Glenn G. Kacprzak, Pascal A. Oesch, Kim-Vy H., Tran, Casey Papovich, Lee Spitler, Caroline M. S. Straatman

TL;DR
This study measures velocity dispersions of massive quiescent galaxies at redshifts 3 to 4, revealing their dynamical masses and suggesting a potentially lighter initial mass function than previously thought, challenging existing assumptions about galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First direct velocity dispersion measurements of massive quiescent galaxies at z>3, indicating a possible light IMF and providing insights into early galaxy formation and evolution.
Findings
Velocity dispersions around 250 km/s for galaxies at z~3.5.
Dynamical masses consistent with stellar masses assuming a Chabrier IMF.
Evidence for a lighter IMF than Salpeter at high redshift.
Abstract
We present the velocity dispersion measurements of four massive quiescent galaxies at based on deep H and Kband spectra using the Keck/MOSFIRE near-infrared spectrograph. We find high velocity dispersions of order km/s based on strong Balmer absorption lines and combine these with size measurements based on HST/WFC3 F160W imaging to infer dynamical masses. The velocity dispersion are broadly consistent with the high stellar masses and small sizes. Together with evidence for quiescent stellar populations, the spectra confirm the existence of a population of massive galaxies that formed rapidly and quenched in the early universe . Investigating the evolution at constant velocity dispersion between and , we find a large increase in effective radius dex and in dynamical-to-stellar mass ratio…
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