Abstract
Using the MOSFIRE near-infrared multi-slit spectrograph on the Keck 1 Telescope, we have secured high signal-to-noise ratio absorption line spectra for six massive galaxies with redshift 2 < z < 2.5. Five of these galaxies lie on the red sequence and show signatures of passive stellar populations in their rest-frame optical spectra. By fitting broadened spectral templates we have determined stellar velocity dispersions and, with broad-band Hubble Space Telescope and Spitzer photometry and imaging, stellar masses and effective radii. Using this enlarged sample of galaxies, we confirm earlier suggestions that quiescent galaxies at z > 2 have small sizes and large velocity dispersions compared to local galaxies of similar stellar mass. The dynamical masses are in very good agreement with stellar masses (log M */M dyn = -0.02 ± 0.03), although the average stellar-to-dynamical mass ratio is larger than that found at lower redshift (-0.23 ± 0.05). By assuming evolution at fixed velocity dispersion, not only do we confirm a surprisingly rapid rate of size growth but we also consider the necessary evolutionary track on the mass-size plane and find a slope α = dlog Re /dlog M * ≳ 2 inconsistent with most numerical simulations of minor mergers. Both results suggest an additional mechanism may be required to explain the size growth of early galaxies. © 2014. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..
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Belli, S., Newman, A. B., Ellis, R. S., & Konidaris, N. P. (2014). Mosfire absorption line spectroscopy of z > 2 quiescent galaxies: Probing a period of rapid size growth. Astrophysical Journal Letters, 788(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/2041-8205/788/2/L29
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