Self-regulated growth of galaxy sizes along the star-forming main sequence
Shweta Jain, Sandro Tacchella, Moein Mosleh

TL;DR
This study uses spatially resolved star formation histories from Hubble data to analyze galaxy size growth along the star-forming main sequence, revealing inside-out and outside-in growth patterns linked to galaxy evolution cycles.
Contribution
It introduces a pixel-by-pixel SED fitting method to reconstruct spatially resolved SFHs, providing new insights into galaxy size growth mechanisms along the main sequence.
Findings
Galaxies above the MS grow outside-in, building central regions.
Galaxies below the MS grow inside-out, with more star formation in outskirts.
Galaxy size growth is self-regulated and oscillates with star formation cycles.
Abstract
We present a systematic analysis of the spatially resolved star formation histories (SFHs) using Hubble Space Telescope imaging data of , intermediate redshifts galaxies from the GOODS-S field, with stellar mass range . We estimate the SFHs in three spatial regions (central region within the half-mass radii , outskirts between , and the whole galaxy) using pixel-by-pixel spectral-energy distribution (SED) fitting, assuming exponentially declining tau model in individual pixels. The reconstructed SFHs are then used to derive and compare the physical properties such as specific star-formation rates (sSFRs), mass-weighted ages (t), and the half-mass radii to get insights on the interplay between the structure and star-formation in galaxies.…
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