JWST/CEERS sheds light on dusty star-forming galaxies: forming bulges, lopsidedness and outside-in quenching at cosmic noon
Aurelien Le Bail, Emanuele Daddi, David Elbaz, Mark Dickinson, Mauro, Giavalisco, Benjamin Magnelli, Carlos Gomez-Guijarro, Boris S. Kalita, Anton, M. Koekemoer, Benne W. Holwerda, Frederic Bournaud, Alexander de la Vega,, Antonello Calabro, Avishai Dekel, Yingjie Cheng

TL;DR
This study uses JWST/NIRCam imaging to resolve the morphology and physical properties of dusty star-forming galaxies at cosmic noon, revealing bulge formation, lopsidedness, and outside-in quenching processes.
Contribution
It provides the first spatially resolved analysis of IR-selected DSFGs at high redshift, linking dust-obscured star formation with galaxy structural evolution.
Findings
Higher redshift galaxies have fragmented disks with low core mass fractions.
Lopsidedness is common and influences galaxy evolution.
23% of galaxies show star formation in the core within quiescent disks.
Abstract
We investigate the morphology and resolved physical properties of a sample of 22 IR-selected DSFG at cosmic noon using the JWST/NIRCam images obtained in the EGS field for the CEERS survey. The resolution of the NIRCam images allowed to spatially resolve these galaxies up to 4.4um and identify their bulge even when extinguished by dust. The goal of this study is to obtain a better understanding of the formation and evolution of FIR-bright galaxies by spatially resolving their properties using JWST in order to look through the dust and bridge the gap between the compact FIR sources and the larger optical SFG. Based on RGB images from the NIRCam filters, we divided each galaxy into several uniformly colored regions, fitted their respective SEDs, and measured physical properties. After classifying each region as SF or quiescent, we assigned galaxies to three classes, depending on whether…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
