CLEAR: The Morphological Evolution of Galaxies in the Green Valley

Papovich, Casey; Cleri, Nikko J.; Giavalisco, Mauro; Trump, Jonathan R.; Matharu, Jasleen; Ji, Zhiyuan; Estrada-Carpenter, Vicente; Momcheva, Ivelina; Brammer, Gabriel; Weiner, Benjamin; Simons, Raymond C.

United States, Canada, Germany, Denmark

Abstract

Quiescent galaxies having more compact morphologies than star-forming galaxies has been a consistent result in the field of galaxy evolution. What is not clear is at what point this divergence happens, i.e., when do quiescent galaxies become compact, and how big of a role does the progenitor effect play in this result? Here we aim to model the morphological and star formation histories of high-redshift (0.8 < z < 1.65) massive galaxies ( $\mathrm{log}(M/{M}_{\odot })$ > 10.2) with stellar population fits using Hubble Space Telescope/WFC3 G102 and G141 grism spectra plus photometry from the CANDELS Lyα Emission at Reionization (CLEAR) survey, constraining the star formation histories for a sample of ~400 massive galaxies using flexible star formation histories. We develop a novel approach to classifying galaxies by their star formation activity in a way that highlights the green valley population, by modeling the specific star formation rate distributions as a function of redshift and deriving the probability that a galaxy is quiescent (P Q ). Using P Q and our flexible star formation histories we outline the evolutionary paths of our galaxies in relation to stellar mass, Sérsic index, effective radius R eff, and stellar mass surface density. We find that the galaxies show no appreciable stellar mass growth after entering the green valley (a net decrease of 4%) while their stellar mass surface densities increase by ~0.25 dex. Therefore galaxies are becoming compact during the green valley and this is due to an increase in the Sérsic index and a decrease in R eff.

2023 The Astrophysical Journal
eHST 7