Extending the evolution of the stellar mass-size relation at $z \leq 2$ to low stellar mass galaxies from HFF and CANDELS
Kalina V. Nedkova, Boris H\"au{\ss}ler, Danilo Marchesini, Paola, Dimauro, Gabriel Brammer, Paul Eigenthaler, Adina D. Feinstein, Henry C., Ferguson, Marc Huertas-Company, Evelyn J. Johnston, Erin Kado-Fong, Jeyhan S., Kartaltepe, Ivo Labb\'e, Daniel Lange-Vagle

TL;DR
This study extends the stellar mass-size relation to low-mass galaxies up to redshift 2 using HFF and CANDELS data, revealing different behaviors for star-forming and quiescent galaxies and their size evolution over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the stellar mass-size relation across a wide mass and redshift range, employing advanced modeling techniques and including low-mass dwarf galaxies from the Fornax cluster.
Findings
Star-forming galaxies follow a single power law across redshifts.
Quiescent galaxies exhibit a double power law with flattening at low masses.
High-mass galaxies grow in size since z~2, low-mass do not.
Abstract
We reliably extend the stellar mass-size relation over to low stellar mass galaxies by combining the depth of Hubble Frontier Fields (HFF) with the large volume covered by CANDELS. Galaxies are simultaneously modelled in multiple bands using the tools developed by the MegaMorph project, allowing robust size (i.e., half-light radius) estimates even for small, faint, and high redshift galaxies. We show that above 10M, star-forming galaxies are well represented by a single power law on the mass-size plane over our entire redshift range. Conversely, the stellar mass-size relation is steep for quiescent galaxies with stellar masses M and flattens at lower masses, regardless of whether quiescence is selected based on star-formation activity, rest-frame colours, or structural characteristics. This flattening occurs at sizes of kpc at…
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