English

The age dependence of the size-stellar mass relation and some implications

Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics 2015-05-13 v1

Abstract

We use a sample of about 48,000 SDSS early-type galaxies to show that older galaxies have smaller half-light radii re and larger velocity dispersions sigma than younger ones of the same stellar mass Mstar. We use the age-corrected luminosity Lcorr as a proxy for Mstar to minimize biases: below Lcorr~1e11 Lsun, galaxies with age ~11 Gyrs have re smaller by 40% and sigma larger by 25%, compared to galaxies that are ~4 Gyrs younger. The sizes and velocity dispersions of more luminous galaxies vary by less than 15%, whatever their age, a challenge for current galaxy formation models. A closer check reveals that the lowering in the dispersion is caused by older galaxies that show a significant departure from the re--Lcorr and sigma--Lcorr relations at high Lcorr. Such features might find an explanation in models where more massive galaxies undergo more minor mergers than less massive galaxies at late times, thus causing a break in the homology. In terms of the Fundamental Plane of early-type galaxies, the data indicate that all galaxies show a significant and similar increase in the dynamical-to-stellar mass ratio with increasing mass, independent of their age. However, older galaxies have smaller Mdyn/Mstar ratios than objects which formed more recently. These findings may suggest that lower mass galaxies and, at fixed stellar mass, higher redshift galaxies, formed from gas-richer progenitors, thus underwent more dissipation and contraction.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0903.3964,
  title  = {The age dependence of the size-stellar mass relation and some implications},
  author = {Francesco Shankar and Mariangela Bernardi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0903.3964},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Accepted by MNRAS Letter

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:43:33.822Z