UVCANDELS: The Role of Dust on the Stellar Mass–Size Relation of Disk Galaxies at 0.5 ≤ z ≤ 3.0

Author:

Nedkova Kalina V.ORCID,Rafelski MarcORCID,Teplitz Harry I.ORCID,Mehta VihangORCID,DeGroot LauraORCID,Ravindranath SwaraORCID,Alavi AnahitaORCID,Beckett AlexanderORCID,Grogin Norman A.ORCID,Häußler BorisORCID,Koekemoer Anton M.ORCID,Oyarzún Grecco A.ORCID,Prichard LauraORCID,Revalski MitchellORCID,Snyder Gregory F.ORCID,Sunnquist BenORCID,Wang XinORCID,Windhorst Rogier A.ORCID,Chartab NimaORCID,Conselice Christopher J.ORCID,Guo YichengORCID,Hathi NimishORCID,Hayes Matthew J.ORCID,Ji ZhiyuanORCID,Kim Keunho J.ORCID,Lucas Ray A.ORCID,Mobasher BahramORCID,O’Connell Robert W.ORCID,Sattari ZahraORCID,Smith Brent M.ORCID,Taamoli SinaORCID,Yung L. Y. AaronORCID,

Abstract

Abstract We use the Ultraviolet Imaging of the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey fields (UVCANDELS) to measure half-light radii in the rest-frame far-UV for ∼16,000 disk-like galaxies over 0.5 ≤ z ≤ 3. We compare these results to rest-frame optical sizes that we measure in a self-consistent way and find that the stellar mass–size relation of disk galaxies is steeper in the rest-frame UV than in the optical across our entire redshift range. We show that this is mainly driven by massive galaxies (≳1010 M ), which we find to also be among the most dusty. Our results are consistent with the literature and have commonly been interpreted as evidence of inside-out growth wherein galaxies form their central structures first. However, they could also suggest that the centers of massive galaxies are more heavily attenuated than their outskirts. We distinguish between these scenarios by modeling and selecting galaxies at z = 2 from the VELA simulation suite in a way that is consistent with UVCANDELS. We show that the effects of dust alone can account for the size differences we measure at z = 2. This indicates that, at different wavelengths, size differences and the different slopes of the stellar mass–size relation do not constitute evidence for inside-out growth.

Funder

Space Telescope Science Institute

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

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