A bending in the size-mass relation of star-forming galaxies across $0.5 < z < 6.0$ at a critical stellar mass of $10^{10}M_\odot$ revealed by JWST
Longyue Chen, Tao Wang, Hanwen Sun, Ke Xu, Luwenjia Zhou, Tiancheng Yang, Maxime Tarrasse, Houjun Mo, Zhaozhou Li, Yangyao Chen, Avishai Dekel, Emanuele Daddi, Xuheng Ding, Mauro Giavalisco, David Elbaz

TL;DR
This study reveals a consistent size-mass relation break at around 10^10 solar masses across redshifts 0.5 to 6, indicating distinct growth modes and the importance of compact star-forming galaxies in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the size-mass relation of galaxies across a wide redshift range, highlighting a critical mass and different growth mechanisms supported by JWST data.
Findings
A broken power-law size-mass relation with a pivot at ~10^10 M_sun.
The pivot mass for quiescent galaxies increases with redshift.
Compact SFGs likely evolve into massive quiescent galaxies, dominating high-z galaxy formation.
Abstract
We investigate the rest-frame optical size-stellar mass relation of galaxies at using deep JWST/NIRCam and MIRI imaging from the PRIMER survey. We find that star-forming galaxies (SFGs) exhibit a broken power-law relation at all redshifts, with a nearly constant pivot mass () of , and a slope flattening above . This highlights the prevalence of a population of compact, massive SFGs that was underrepresented in previous studies. The size distribution of quiescent galaxies (QGs) is well described by a mixture power-law model, with a pivot mass that increases from at to at , suggesting that the minimum halo mass required to quench high-mass galaxies increases with redshift. The bending in the size-mass relation of SFGs supports two distinct size…
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