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Kinematic Downsizing at z~2

Authors :
Simons, Raymond C.
Kassin, Susan A.
Trump, Jonathan R.
Weiner, Benjamin J.
Heckman, Timothy M.
Barro, Guillermo
Koo, David C.
Guo, Yicheng
Pacifici, Camilla
Koekemoer, Anton
Stephens, Andrew W.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We present results from a survey of the internal kinematics of 49 star-forming galaxies at z$\,\sim\,$2 in the CANDELS fields with the Keck/MOSFIRE spectrograph (SIGMA, Survey in the near-Infrared of Galaxies with Multiple position Angles). Kinematics (rotation velocity $V_{rot}$ and integrated gas velocity dispersion $\sigma_g$) are measured from nebular emission lines which trace the hot ionized gas surrounding star-forming regions. We find that by z$\,\sim\,$2, massive star-forming galaxies ($\log\,M_*/M_{\odot}\gtrsim10.2$) have assembled primitive disks: their kinematics are dominated by rotation, they are consistent with a marginally stable disk model, and they form a Tully-Fisher relation. These massive galaxies have values of $V_{rot}/\sigma_g$ which are factors of 2-5 lower than local well-ordered galaxies at similar masses. Such results are consistent with findings by other studies. We find that low mass galaxies ($\log\,M_*/M_{\odot}\lesssim10.2$) at this epoch are still in the early stages of disk assembly: their kinematics are often supported by gas velocity dispersion and they fall from the Tully-Fisher relation to significantly low values of $V_{rot}$. This "kinematic downsizing" implies that the process(es) responsible for disrupting disks at z$\,\sim\,$2 have a stronger effect and/or are more active in low mass systems. In conclusion, we find that the period of rapid stellar mass growth at z$\,\sim\,$2 is coincident with the nascent assembly of low mass disks and the assembly and settling of high mass disks.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, submitted to ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1606.00009
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/0004-637X/830/1/14