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Clumps as multiscale structures in cosmic noon galaxies

Authors :
Kalita, Boris S
Suzuki, Tomoko L
Kashino, Daichi
Silverman, John D
Daddi, Emanuele
Ho, Luis C
Ding, Xuheng
Mercier, Wilfried
Faisst, Andreas L
Sheth, Kartik
Valentino, Francesco
Puglisi, Annagrazia
Saito, Toshiki
Kakkad, Darshan
Ilbert, Olivier
Khostovan, Ali Ahmad
Liu, Zhaoxuan
Tanaka, Takumi
Magdis, Georgios
Zavala, Jorge A
Tan, Qinghua
Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S
Yang, Lilan
Koekemoer, Anton M
McKinney, Jed
Robertson, Brant E
Jin, Shuowen
Hayward, Christopher C
Hirschmann, Michaela
Franco, Maximilien
Shuntov, Marko
Gozaliasl, Ghassem
Kaminsky, Aidan
Rich, R Michael
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 536, Issue 3, January 2025, Pages 3090-3111
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Star-forming clumps have been found to significantly influence the star formation of gas-rich $z>1$ galaxies. Using public data from JWST/NIRCam (COSMOS-Web) and ALMA (FMOS-COSMOS), we study a sample of 32 massive ($>10^{10.5}\,\rm M_{\odot}$) main-sequence galaxies at $z_{\rm spec}\sim1.5$ with $\sim0.3\,\rm kpc$ resolution. We create composite morphological models consisting of bulge, disk, and clumps to fully 'deconstruct' the galaxy images. With the resulting measurements of the flux and size of these components, we find the following: (I)The combined contribution of clumps is $1-30\%$ towards the net star formation rate (SFR) of the host while contributing $1-20\%$ to its stellar mass. The clumps show a correlation between their stellar mass and SFR, but have an increased specific-SFR (sSFR) relative to the star-forming main sequence, with offsets ranging from $0\lesssim\Delta\log\rm sSFR\lesssim 0.4$. They feature star formation surface densities of $10^{-2}-10^{2}\,\rm M_{\odot}/yr/kpc^{2}$, consistent with values observed in local star-forming and starburst galaxies. (II)The clumps span a large range of characteristic sizes ($r_{e}\sim0.1-1\,\rm kpc$) and stellar masses ($\sim 10^{8.0-9.5}\,\rm M_{\odot}$). We estimate a mass-size relation ($r_{e}\propto\rm M_{\star}^{\,0.52\pm0.07}$) along with a stellar mass function (slope, $\alpha=-1.85\pm 0.19$), both suggesting a hierarchical nature similar to that expected in star-forming regions in local galaxies. (III)Our measurements agree with the properties of stellar clumps in $z\gtrsim1$ lensed systems, bridging the gap between lensed and unlensed studies by detecting structures at sub-kpc scales.(IV)Clumps are found to be preferentially located along spiral features visible primarily in the residual rest-frame near-IR images. In conclusion, we present an observation-based, coherent picture of star-forming clumps at $z>1$.<br />Comment: Published in MNRAS; 22 pages, 24 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 536, Issue 3, January 2025, Pages 3090-3111
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2501.03328
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae2781