The sizes, masses and specific star formation rates of massive galaxies at 1.3 < z < 1.5: strong evidence in favour of evolution via minor mergers

McLure, R. J.; Dunlop, J. S.; Jarvis, M. J.; Cirasuolo, M.; Hartley, W. G.; Caputi, K. I.; Curtis-Lake, E.; Buitrago, F.; Almaini, O.; Bonfield, D. G.; Bruce, V. A.; Foucaud, S.; Pearce, H. J.; Bradshaw, E. J.; Chuter, R.

Netherlands, United Kingdom, Taiwan

Abstract

We report the results of a comprehensive study of the relationship between galaxy size, stellar mass and specific star formation rate (sSFR) at redshifts 1.3 < z < 1.5. Based on a mass-complete (M ≥ 6 × 1010 M), spectroscopic sample from the UK Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Ultradeep Survey, with accurate stellar-mass measurements derived from spectro-photometric fitting, we find that at z ≃ 1.4 the location of massive galaxies on the size-mass plane is determined primarily by their sSFR. At this epoch, we find that massive galaxies which are passive (sSFR ≤ 0.1 Gyr-1) follow a tight size-mass relation, with half-light radii a factor of fg = 2.4 ± 0.2 smaller than their local counterparts. Moreover, amongst the passive sub-sample we find no evidence that the off-set from the local size-mass relation is a function of stellar population age. In contrast, we find that massive star-forming galaxies at this epoch lie closer to the local late-type size-mass relation and are only a factor of fg = 1.6 ± 0.2 smaller than observed locally. Based on a sub-sample with dynamical-mass estimates, which consists of both passive and star-forming objects, we also derive an independent estimate of fg = 2.3 ± 0.3 for the typical growth in half-light radius between z ≃ 1.4 and the present day. Focusing on the passive sub-sample, we conclude that to produce the necessary evolution predominantly via major mergers would require an unfeasible number of merger events and overpopulate the high-mass end of the local stellar-mass function. In contrast, we find that a scenario in which mass accretion is dominated by minor mergers can comfortably produce the necessary evolution, whereby an increase in stellar mass of only a factor of ≃2, accompanied by size growth of a factor of ≃3.5, is required to reconcile the size-mass relation at z ≃ 1.4 with that observed locally. Finally, we note that a significant fraction (44 ± 12 per cent) of the passive galaxies in our sample have a disc-like morphology, providing additional evidence that separate physical processes are responsible for the quenching of star formation and morphological transformation in massive galaxies.

2013 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
eHST 185