The Magnitude-Size Relation of Galaxies out to z ~ 1
L. Simard, D. C. Koo, S. M. Faber, V. L. Sarajedini, N. P. Vogt, A. C., Phillips, K. Gebhardt, G. D. Illingworth, K. L. Wu (UCO/Lick Observatory)

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between galaxy brightness and size up to redshift 1, finding little to no evolution in surface brightness for most galaxies when accounting for selection effects.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the magnitude-size relation of galaxies up to z ~ 1, emphasizing the importance of selection effects and offering insights into galaxy evolution.
Findings
No significant evolution in surface brightness for bright disk galaxies after correction.
Most galaxies follow the local magnitude-size envelope across redshifts.
High surface brightness outliers at z > 0.7 suggest diverse galaxy origins.
Abstract
As part of the Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe (DEEP) survey, a sample of 190 field galaxies (I_{814} <= 23.5) in the ``Groth Survey Strip'' has been used to analyze the magnitude-size relation over the range 0.1 < z < 1.1. The survey is statistically complete to this magnitude limit. All galaxies have photometric structural parameters, including bulge fractions (B/T), from Hubble Space Telescope images, and spectroscopic redshifts from the Keck Telescope. The analysis includes a determination of the survey selection function in the magnitude-size plane as a function of redshift, which mainly drops faint galaxies at large distances. Our results suggest that selection effects play a very important role. A first analysis treats disk-dominated galaxies with B/T < 0.5. If selection effects are ignored, the mean disk surface brightness (averaged over all galaxies) increases by ~1.3 mag…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
