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Early results from GLASS-JWST. V: the first rest-frame optical size-luminosity relation of galaxies at $z>7$

Authors :
Yang, Lilan
Morishita, T.
Leethochawalit, N.
Castellano, M.
Calabro, A.
Treu, T.
Bonchi, A.
Fontana, A.
Mason, C.
Merlin, E.
Paris, D.
Trenti, M.
Roberts-Borsani, G.
Bradac, M.
Vanzella, E.
Vulcani, B.
Marchesini, D.
Ding, X.
Nanayakkara, Themiya
Birrer, Simon
Glazebrook, K.
Jones, T.
Boyett, K.
Santini, P.
Strait, Victoria
Wang, Xin
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present the first rest-frame optical size-luminosity relation of galaxies at $z>7$, using the NIRCam imaging data obtained by the GLASS James Webb Space Telescope Early Release Science (GLASS-JWST-ERS) program, providing the deepest extragalactic data of the ERS campaign. Our sample consist of 19 photometrically selected bright galaxies with $m_\text{F444W}\leq27.8$ at $7<z<9$ and $m_\text{F444W}<28.2$ at $z\sim9-15$. We measure the size of the galaxies in 5 bands, from the rest-frame optical ($\sim4800\,{\rm \AA}$) to the ultra-violet (UV; $\sim1600\,{\rm \AA}$) based on the S\'ersic model, and analyze the size-luminosity relation as a function of wavelength. Remarkably, the data quality of NIRCam imaging is sufficient to probe the half-light radius $r_e$ down to $\sim 100$ pc at $z>7$. Given the limited sample size and magnitude range, we first fix the slope to that observed for larger samples in rest-frame UV using HST samples. The median size $r_0$ at the reference luminosity $M=-21$ decreases slightly from rest-frame optical ($600\pm80$ pc) to UV ($450\pm130$ pc). We then re-fit the size-luminosity relation allowing the slope to vary. The slope is consistent with $\beta\sim0.2$ for all bands except F150W, where we find a marginally steeper slope of $\beta=0.53\pm0.15$. The steep UV slope is mainly driven by the smallest and faintest galaxies. If confirmed by larger samples, it implies that the UV size-luminosity relation breaks toward the faint end as suggested by lensing studies.<br />Comment: Accepted by ApJL, 9 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.13101
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ac8803