Galaxy Zoo Bar Lengths: A Catalogue of Measurements from Hubble Space Telescope Images and the Evolution of Galactic Bar Structure at z < 1
Tenley Hutchinson-Smith, Brooke D. Simmons, Karen L. Masters, Alison Coil, Izzy Garland, Tobias G\'eron, Sandor Kruk, Chris Lintott, Rebecca Smethurst, Amauri Tapia, Kyle Willett, Elisabeth Baeten, Sylvia Beer, Michael L. Peck, Julianne Wilcox

TL;DR
This study measures and analyzes the properties and evolution of galactic bars in a large sample of HST-observed disk galaxies across redshifts up to 3, revealing how bars relate to galaxy quenching and mass.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive catalog of bar lengths and widths in thousands of galaxies and investigates their evolution and correlation with galaxy properties from z<1 to higher redshifts.
Findings
Bar lengths increase with stellar mass.
Bar properties differ between star-forming and quiescent galaxies.
Bars tend to be slightly weaker at higher redshifts.
Abstract
Understanding the role of galactic scale bars in disk galaxy evolution requires detailed measurements of bar properties across galaxies hosting bars at many redshifts. We present measurements of bar lengths and widths in a sample of 8230 disk galaxies from Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Legacy surveys. The highest-redshift barred galaxies in the sample have ; most have . Using a mass-complete sample from the COSMOS field, we examine bar properties and evolution within in galaxies with stellar mass . The lowest-mass galaxies in our sample have similar star formation rate (SFR) distributions whether or not they host bars. For galaxies with , barred galaxies are more likely to be quiescent or quenched, consistent with bars mainly participating in slow quenching processes. The median…
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