Beyond compactness: a structural-dynamical-evolutionary manifold for the stellar-to-dynamical mass ratio in ultra-compact massive galaxies
Chiara Spiniello

TL;DR
This study investigates how the stellar-to-dynamical mass ratio in ultra-compact massive galaxies depends on structural, dynamical, and stellar population properties, revealing that velocity dispersion primarily governs this ratio rather than compactness alone.
Contribution
It introduces a structural-dynamical manifold showing that velocity dispersion, not compactness, mainly influences the stellar-to-dynamical mass ratio in UCMGs, accounting for coupled dynamical and evolutionary effects.
Findings
Anti-correlation between compactness and mass ratio under constant virial coefficient.
Mass ratio variation is mainly driven by velocity dispersion, not size alone.
Structural-dynamical manifold explains ~62% of the variance in mass ratio.
Abstract
Ultra-compact massive galaxies (UCMGs) exhibit elevated stellar-to-dynamical mass ratios when dynamical masses are estimated using standard virial prescriptions. This discrepancy has been interpreted as non-homology driven by their compactness. This study investigates how the stellar-to-dynamical mass ratio depends on compactness (C), velocity dispersion (), stellar population properties (age, metallicity, and [Mg/Fe]), and star formation histories (SFHs). The analysis is based on a homogeneous sample of 482 UCMGs from the INSPIRE and E-INSPIRE surveys, extending to smaller sizes than previously analysed samples. I first derive the compactness-mass relation assuming a constant virial coefficient (K=5). I then correct stellar masses for IMF variations and recompute stellar-to-dynamical mass ratios using an empirical prescription where the virial coefficient varies with radius…
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