Early Results from GLASS-JWST. V: The First Rest-frame Optical Size–Luminosity Relation of Galaxies at z > 7

Yang, L. and Morishita, T. and Leethochawalit, N. and Castellano, M. and Calabrò, A. and Treu, T. and Bonchi, A. and Fontana, A. and Mason, C. and Merlin, E. and Paris, D. and Trenti, M. and Roberts-Borsani, G. and Bradac, M. and Vanzella, E. and Vulcani, B. and Marchesini, D. and Ding, X. and Nanayakkara, T. and Birrer, S. and Glazebrook, K. and Jones, T. and Boyett, K. and Santini, P. and Strait, V. and Wang, X. (2022) Early Results from GLASS-JWST. V: The First Rest-frame Optical Size–Luminosity Relation of Galaxies at z > 7. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 938 (2). L17. ISSN 2041-8205

[thumbnail of Yang_2022_ApJL_938_L17.pdf] Text
Yang_2022_ApJL_938_L17.pdf - Published Version

Download (1MB)

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 consists of 19 photometrically selected bright galaxies with mF444W ≤ 27.8 at 7 < z < 9 and mF444W < 28.2 at z ∼ 9−15. We measure the size of the galaxies in five bands, from rest-frame optical (∼4800 Å) to the UV (∼1600 Å) based on the Sérsic model, and analyse the size–luminosity relation as a function of wavelength. Remarkably, the data quality of the NIRCam imaging is sufficient to probe the half-light radius re down to ∼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 Hubble Space Telescope samples. The median size r0 at the reference luminosity M = −21 decreases slightly from rest-frame optical (600 ± 80 pc) to UV (450 ± 130 pc). We then refit the size–luminosity relation allowing the slope to vary. The slope is consistent with β ∼ 0.2 for all bands except F150W, where we find a marginally steeper slope of β = 0.53 ± 0.15. 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.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Library Press > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@stmlibrarypress.com
Date Deposited: 22 Apr 2023 05:53
Last Modified: 04 Sep 2025 03:42
URI: http://archive.go4subs.com/id/eprint/1050

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item