The quiescent population at $0.5\le z \le 0.9$: Environmental impact on the mass-size relation
M. Figueira, M. Siudek, A. Pollo, J. Krywult, D. Vergani, M., Bolzonella, O. Cucciati, A. Iovino

TL;DR
This study investigates how the environment influences the mass-size relation of quiescent galaxies at intermediate redshift, revealing that size evolution is mainly driven by progenitor bias rather than mergers.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the environmental impact on the mass-size relation of quiescent galaxies at $0.5 \,\leq z \leq 0.9$, highlighting the limited role of minor mergers.
Findings
The slope and intercept of the mass-size relation agree with previous studies at similar redshift.
The average sizes of quiescent galaxies are similar in low- and high-density environments.
Minor mergers contribute to only 30-40% of size growth, with progenitor bias playing a major role.
Abstract
How the quiescent galaxies evolve with redshift and the factors that impact their evolution are still debated. It is still unclear what the dominant mechanisms of passive galaxy growth are and what role is played by the environment in shaping their evolutionary paths over cosmic time. Our aim is to study the mass-size relation (MSR) of the quiescent population and to understand how the environment shapes the MSR at intermediate redshift. We used the VIPERS, a large spectroscopic survey of 90~000 galaxies in the redshift range . We selected a mass-complete sample of 4786 passive galaxies based on the NUVrK diagram and refined it using the spectral index to study the MSR of the passive population over . The impact of the environment on the MSR and on the growth of the quiescent population is studied through the density contrast. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Scientific Research and Discoveries
