JWST UNCOVERs the Optical Size - Stellar Mass Relation at $4<z<8$: Rapid Growth in the Sizes of Low Mass Galaxies in the First Billion Years of the Universe
Tim B. Miller, Katherine A. Suess, David J. Setton, Sedona H. Price, Ivo Labbe, Rachel Bezanson, Gabriel Brammer, Sam E. Cutler, Lukas J. Furtak, Joel Leja, Richard Pan, Bingjie Wang, John R. Weaver, Katherine E. Whitaker, Pratika Dayal, Anna de Graaff, Robert Feldmann

TL;DR
This study uses JWST data to analyze the size and morphology evolution of low-mass galaxies during the first billion years of the universe, revealing rapid size growth and consistent structural properties over time.
Contribution
First measurement of the size-mass relation for galaxies at 4<z<8 using JWST, showing rapid size growth and consistent morphology evolution during reionization.
Findings
Galaxy sizes at log M*/M_sun=8.5 grow from 400 pc at z=8 to 830 pc at z=4.
Size evolution is faster than expected from simple cosmological scalings.
The size-mass relation slope and scatter are non-evolving over cosmic time.
Abstract
We study the rest-frame optical and ultraviolet morphology of galaxies in the first billion years of the Universe. Using JWST data from the UNCOVER and MegaScience surveys targeting the lensing cluster Abell 2744 we present multi-band morphological measurements for a sample of 995 galaxies selected using 20-band NIRCam photometry and 35 using NIRSpec Prism spectroscopy over the redshift range of . The wavelength-dependent morphology is measured using pysersic by simultaneously modeling the images in 6 NIRCam wide filters covering the rest-frame UV to optical. The joint modeling technique increases the precision of measured radii by 50\%. Galaxies in our sample show a wide range of Sersic indices, with no systematic difference between optical and UV morphology. We model the size-mass relation in a Bayesian manner using a continuity model to directly fit the redshift evolution…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
