CLEAR: The Morphological Evolution of Galaxies in the Green Valley
Vicente Estrada-Carpenter, Casey Papovich, Ivelina Momcheva, Gabriel, Brammer, Raymond C. Simons, Nikko J. Cleri, Mauro Giavalisco, Jasleen, Matharu, Jonathan R. Trump, Benjamin Weiner, and Zhiyuan Ji

TL;DR
This study models the morphological and star-formation histories of high-redshift massive galaxies, revealing that galaxies become more compact during the green valley phase due to structural changes rather than mass growth.
Contribution
It introduces a novel classification method based on formation activity and models galaxy evolution in the green valley using flexible star-formation histories.
Findings
Galaxies show minimal stellar mass growth after entering the green valley.
Stellar mass surface densities increase by about 0.25 dex during this phase.
Galaxies become more compact, with increased Sersic index and decreased effective radius.
Abstract
Quiescent galaxies having more compact morphologies than star-forming galaxies has been a consistent result in the field of galaxy evolution. What is not clear is at what point this divergence happens, i.e. when do quiescent galaxies become compact, and how big of a role does the progenitor effect play in this result? Here we aim to model the morphological and star-formation histories of high redshift (0.8 z 1.65) massive galaxies (log(M/M) 10.2) with stellar population fits using HST/WFC3 G102 and G141 grism spectra plus photometry from the CLEAR (CANDELS Lyman-alpha Emission at Reionization) survey, constraining the star-formation histories for a sample of 400 massive galaxies using flexible star-formation histories. We develop a novel approach to classifying galaxies by their formation activity in a way that highlights the green valley population, by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
