Stellar Mass Assembly History of Massive Quiescent Galaxies since $z\sim4$: Insights from Spatially Resolved SED Fitting with JWST Data
Novan Saputra Haryana, Masayuki Akiyama, Abdurro'uf, Hesti Retno Tri Wulandari, Juan Pablo Alfonzo, Kianhong Lee, Naoki Matsumoto, Ryo Albert Sutanto, Muhammad Nur Ihsan Effendi, Itsna Khoirul Fitriana, Ibnu Nurul Huda, Anton Timur Jaelani, Sultan Hadi Kusuma, Lucky Puspitarini

TL;DR
This study uses spatially resolved SED fitting with JWST data to trace the size and mass growth of massive quiescent galaxies from redshift 4 to 0, revealing growth driven by mergers and inside-out stellar mass buildup.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of internal structure evolution of massive quiescent galaxies across a wide redshift range using JWST data.
Findings
Half-mass radius increases by a factor of 5.4 from z~3.5 to z~0.5.
Stellar mass growth occurs mainly in outskirts, central regions remain unchanged.
Size-mass relation slope varies with redshift, indicating different merger-driven growth modes.
Abstract
Massive quiescent galaxies at high redshift show significantly more compact morphology than their local counterparts. To examine their internal structure across a wide redshift range and investigate potential redshift dependence, we performed spatially resolved SED fitting using pixedfit software on massive quiescent galaxies at with public James Webb Space Telescope and Hubble Space Telescope imaging data from the Public Release Imaging for Extragalactic Research and the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science Survey. We find that at , the half-mass radius is about 5.4 times smaller than at . This growth is driven by stellar mass buildup in the outskirts ( kpc), while the central regions ( kpc) remain largely unchanged, with stellar mass surface density similar to local quiescent galaxies. The estimated star…
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