Clumps as multiscale structures in cosmic noon galaxies
Boris S Kalita, Tomoko L Suzuki, Daichi Kashino, John D Silverman,, Emanuele Daddi, Luis C Ho, Xuheng Ding, Wilfried Mercier, Andreas L Faisst,, Kartik Sheth, Francesco Valentino, Annagrazia Puglisi, Toshiki Saito, Darshan, Kakkad, Olivier Ilbert, Ali Ahmad Khostovan

TL;DR
This study uses JWST and ALMA data to analyze the properties, sizes, and contributions of star-forming clumps in galaxies at cosmic noon, revealing their hierarchical structure and role in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides a detailed, multi-component morphological analysis of star-forming clumps at z~1.5, including their sizes, masses, and star formation rates, bridging observations of lensed and unlensed galaxies.
Findings
Clumps contribute up to 30% of galaxy SFR.
Clumps have sizes 0.1-1 kpc and follow a mass-size relation.
Clumps are preferentially located along spiral features.
Abstract
Star-forming clumps have been found to significantly influence the star formation of gas-rich galaxies. Using public data from JWST/NIRCam (COSMOS-Web) and ALMA (FMOS-COSMOS), we study a sample of 32 massive () main-sequence galaxies at with resolution. We create composite morphological models consisting of bulge, disk, and clumps to fully 'deconstruct' the galaxy images. With the resulting measurements of the flux and size of these components, we find the following: (I)The combined contribution of clumps is towards the net star formation rate (SFR) of the host while contributing to its stellar mass. The clumps show a correlation between their stellar mass and SFR, but have an increased specific-SFR (sSFR) relative to the star-forming main sequence, with offsets ranging from…
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