JADES + JEMS: A Detailed Look at the Buildup of Central Stellar Cores and Suppression of Star Formation in Galaxies at Redshifts 3 < z < 4.5
JADES + JEMS: A Detailed Look at the Buildup of Central Stellar Cores and Suppression of Star Formation in Galaxies at Redshifts 3 < z < 4.5
Oct 9, 2024·,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Zhiyuan Ji
Christina C. Williams
Sandro Tacchella
Katherine A. Suess
William M. Baker
Stacey Alberts
Andrew J. Bunker
Benjamin D. Johnson
Brant Robertson
Fengwu Sun
Daniel J. Eisenstein
Marcia Rieke
Michael v. Maseda
Kevin Hainline
Ryan Hausen
George Rieke
Christopher N. A. Willmer
Eiichi Egami
Irene Shivaei
Stefano Carniani
Stephane Charlot
Jacopo Chevallard
Emma Curtis-Lake
Tobias J. Looser
Roberto Maiolino
Chris Willott
Zuyi Chen
Jakob M. Helton
Jianwei Lyu
Erica Nelson
Rachana Bhatawdekar
Kristan Boyett
Lester Sandles
Abstract
We present a spatially resolved study of stellar populations in six galaxies with stellar masses $M_{\ast} \sim 10^{10}\ M_{\odot}$
at $z \sim 3.7$
using $14-\mathrm{filter}$
James Webb Space Telescope (JWST)/NIRCam imaging from the JADES and JEMS surveys. The six galaxies are visually selected to have clumpy substructures with distinct colors over rest frame $3600-4100\ \mathrm{\AA}$
, including a red, dominant stellar core that is close to their stellar-light centroids. With $23-\mathrm{filter}$
photometry from the Hubble Space Telescope to JWST, we measure the stellar-population properties of individual structural components via spectral energy distribution fitting using Prospector. We find that the central stellar cores are $\gtrsim 2$
times more massive than the Toomre mass, indicating they may not form via single in situ fragmentation. The stellar cores have stellar ages of $0.4-0.7\ \mathrm{Gyr}$
that are similar to the timescale of clump inward migration due to dynamical friction, suggesting that they likely instead formed through the coalescence of giant stellar clumps. While they have not yet quenched, the six galaxies are below the star-forming main sequence by $0.2-0.7\ \mathrm{dex}$
. Within each galaxy, we find that the specific star formation rate is lower in the central stellar core, and the stellar-mass surface density of the core is already similar to quenched galaxies of the same masses and redshifts. Meanwhile, the stellar ages of the cores are either comparable to or younger than the extended, smooth parts of the galaxies. Our findings are consistent with model predictions of the gas-rich compaction scenario for the buildup of galaxies’ central regions at high redshifts. We are likely witnessing the coeval formation of dense central cores, along with the onset of galaxy-wide quenching at $z > 3$
.
Type
Publication
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 974, Issue 1, id.135, 27 pages
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