Through Thick and Thin: The Cosmic Evolution of Disk Scale Height
Si-Yue Yu, Luis C. Ho, Takafumi Tsukui, John D. Silverman, Marc Huertas-Company, Anton M. Koekemoer, Maximilien Franco, Richard Massey, Lilan Yang, Rafael C. Arango-Toro, Andreas L. Faisst, Ghassem Gozaliasl, Kartik Sheth, Jeyhan S. Kartaltepe, Can Xu, Aryana Haghjoo

TL;DR
This study uses JWST data to analyze the evolution of disk galaxy vertical structures, revealing how disk scale heights change over cosmic time and the processes influencing thick and thin disk formation.
Contribution
It introduces a new correction method for projection bias and provides detailed measurements of disk scale heights across redshifts, linking high-redshift disks to present-day structures.
Findings
Median disk scale height increases from 0.56 to 0.84 kpc from z=3.25 to 1.25
The scale-height-to-length ratio remains constant at high z and increases at low z
Thin disks start forming around z=2, dominating at z<1
Abstract
To investigate the formation and evolution of vertical structures in disk galaxies, we measure global scale heights, averaging thin and thick components when present, for 2631 edge-on disk galaxies with at from the JWST COSMOS-Web survey. We show that dust extinction systematically overestimates scale heights at shorter rest-frame wavelengths, and therefore adopt a fixed rest-frame wavelength of 1 m. After further correcting for projection-induced bias using a new accurate method, we find that the median disk scale height increases from kpc at to kpc at , and subsequently decreases to kpc at . The bias-corrected disk scale-length-to-height ratio remains constant at for , but rises to at . These results imply that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
