Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program: A Mass-Dependent Slope of the Galaxy Size-Mass Relation at $z<1$
Lalitwadee Kawinwanichakij, John D. Silverman, Xuheng Ding, Angelo, George, Ivana Damjanov, Marcin Sawicki, Masayuki Tanaka, Dan S. Taranu, Simon, Birrer, Song Huang, Junyao Li, Masato Onodera, Takatoshi Shibuya, Naoki, Yasuda

TL;DR
This study analyzes galaxy size-mass relations at redshifts 0.2 to 1.0 using a large sample, revealing a broken power-law behavior with a mass-dependent slope change, and links the pivot mass to galaxy quenching and growth modes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of the mass-dependent slopes of galaxy size-mass relations across different populations and redshifts using a large, high-quality dataset.
Findings
Star-forming galaxies are larger than quiescent ones at fixed mass.
Both populations exhibit broken power-law size-mass relations with a pivot mass.
The pivot mass coincides with the transition from in-situ star formation to merger-driven growth.
Abstract
We present the galaxy size-mass () distributions using a stellar-mass complete sample of million galaxies, covering deg, with over the redshift range from the second public data release of the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program. We confirm that, at fixed redshift and stellar mass over the range of , star-forming galaxies are on average larger than quiescent galaxies. The large sample of galaxies with accurate size measurements, thanks to the excellent imaging quality, also enables us to demonstrate that the relations of both populations have a form of broken power-law, with a clear change of slopes at a pivot stellar mass . For quiescent galaxies, below an (evolving) pivot mass of the relation…
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