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Published February 1, 2018 | Accepted Version + Published
Journal Article Open

The Intrinsic Characteristics of Galaxies on the SFR–M_∗ Plane at 1.2 < z < 4: I. The Correlation between Stellar Age, Central Density, and Position Relative to the Main Sequence

Abstract

We use the deep CANDELS observations in the GOODS North and South fields to revisit the correlations between stellar mass (M_*), star formation rate (SFR) and morphology, and to introduce a fourth dimension, the mass-weighted stellar age, in galaxies at 1.2 < z < 4. We do this by making new measures of M_*, SFR, and stellar age thanks to an improved SED fitting procedure that allows various star formation history for each galaxy. Like others, we find that the slope of the main sequence (MS) of star formation in the M_*; SFR plane bends at high mass. We observe clear morphological differences among galaxies across the MS, which also correlate with stellar age. At all redshifts, galaxies that are quenching or quenched, and thus old, have high Σ_1 (the projected density within the central 1 kpc), while younger, star-forming galaxies span a much broader range of Σ_1, which includes the high values observed for quenched galaxies, but also extends to much lower values. As galaxies age and quench, the stellar age and the dispersion of Σ_1 for fixed values of M_* shows two different regimes: one at the low-mass end, where quenching might be driven by causes external to the galaxies; the other at the high-mass end, where quenching is driven by internal causes, very likely the mass given the low scatter of Σ_1 (mass quenching). We suggest that the monotonic increase of central density as galaxies grow is one manifestation of a more general phenomenon of structural transformation that galaxies undergo as they evolve.

Additional Information

© 2018. The American Astronomical Society. Received 2017 June 5; revised 2017 December 19; accepted 2017 December 21; published 2018 January 31. This work is based on observations taken by the CANDELS Multi-Cycle Treasury Program with the NASA/ESA HST, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS5-26555. K.E.W. gratefully acknowledge support by NASA through Hubble Fellowship grant No. HF2-51368, awarded by the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., for NASA. R.S.S. acknowledges the generous support of the Downsbrough family.

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Published - Lee_2018_ApJ_853_131.pdf

Accepted Version - 1706.02311.pdf

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August 21, 2023
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