Abstract
We present a universal linear correlation between the stellar mass and surface brightness (SB) of galaxies at 0.3 < z < 3, using a deep K-band-selected catalog in the GOODS-North region. The correlation has a nearly constant slope, independent of redshift and color of galaxies in the rest-z frame. Considering unresolved compact galaxies, the tight correlation gives a lower boundary of SB for a given stellar mass; lower SB galaxies are prohibited over the boundary. The universal slope suggests that the stellar mass in galaxies was built up over their cosmic histories in a similar manner irrelevant to galaxy mass, as opposed to the scenario that massive galaxies mainly accumulated their stellar mass by major merging. In contrast, SB shows a strong dependence on redshift for a given stellar mass. It evolves as ∼ (1 + z)-2.0∼ -0.8, in addition to dimming as (1 + z)4 by the cosmological expansion effect. The brightening depends on galaxy color and stellar mass. The blue population (rest-frame U - V < 0), which is dominated by young and star-forming galaxies, evolves as ∼ (1 + z) -0.8± 0.3 in the rest-V band. On the other hand, the red population (U - V>0) and the massive galaxies (M *>1010 M Ȯ) show stronger brightening, (1 + z)-1.50.1. By comparison with galaxy evolution models, the phenomena are well understood by the pure luminosity evolution of galaxies out to z ∼ 3. © 2010. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
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Ichikawa, T., Kajisawa, M., Yamada, T., Akiyama, M., Yoshikawa, T., Onodera, M., & Konishi, M. (2010). Moircs deep survey. V. A universal relation for stellar mass and surface brightness of galaxies. Astrophysical Journal, 709(2), 741–748. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/709/2/741
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