Clumps in High-Redshift Galaxies: Mass Scaling and Radial Trends from JADES
Yongda Zhu, Marcia J. Rieke, Zhiyuan Ji, Andrew J. Bunker, Courtney Carreira, A. Lola Danhaive, Qiao Duan, Eiichi Egami, Daniel J. Eisenstein, Kevin Hainline, Benjamin D. Johnson, Zheng Ma, D\'avid Pusk\'as, George H. Rieke, Pierluigi Rinaldi, Brant Robertson, Sandro Tacchella

TL;DR
This study analyzes thousands of high-redshift galaxies using JWST data to understand the properties, distribution, and evolution of star-forming clumps, revealing insights into galaxy growth and structural changes over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical analysis of galaxy clumps at high redshift, revealing their physical properties, size-mass relations, and radial trends, advancing models of galaxy formation.
Findings
Clumps are typically low-mass and actively star-forming.
Clump sizes and separations increase with cosmic time.
Radial trends suggest structural evolution via migration or disruption.
Abstract
Massive star-forming clumps are a prominent feature of high-redshift galaxies and are thought to trace gravitational fragmentation, feedback, and bulge growth in gas-rich disks. We present a statistical analysis of clumps in 3600 galaxies spanning from deep JWST/NIRCam imaging in the JADES GOODS--South field. Clumps are identified as residual features after subtracting smooth S\'ersic profiles, enabling a uniform, rest-frame optical census of sub-galactic structure. We characterize their physical properties, size--mass relations, and spatial distributions to constrain models of sub-galactic structure formation and evolution. We find that clumps in our sample are typically low-mass (), actively star-forming, and show diverse gas-phase metallicity, dust attenuation, and stellar population properties. Their sizes and average pairwise…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Technology and Applications
