4.7 Article

The fundamental plane at z=1.27:: First calibration of the mass scale of red galaxies at redshifts z > 1

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 585, Issue 1, Pages 78-89

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/345989

Keywords

galaxies : clusters : general; galaxies : elliptical and lenticular, cD; galaxies : evolution; galaxies : kinematics and dynamics; galaxies : structure

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We present results on the fundamental plane of early-type galaxies in the cluster RDCS J0848+4453 at z=1.27. Internal velocity dispersions of three K-selected early-type galaxies are determined from deep Keck spectra, using absorption lines in the rest-frame wavelength range 3400-4000 Angstrom. Structural parameters are determined from Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS images. The galaxies show substantial offsets from the fundamental plane of the nearby Coma Cluster, as expected from passive evolution of their stellar populations. The offsets from the fundamental plane can be expressed as offsets in mass-to-light (M/L) ratio. The M/L ratios of the two most massive galaxies are consistent with an extrapolation of results obtained for clusters at 0.02<0.83. The evolution of early-type galaxies with masses greater than 10(11) M(circle dot) is well described by ln M/L(B) proportional to (1.06+/-0.09)z, corresponding to passive evolution of -1.50+/-0.13 mag at z=1.3. Ignoring selection effects, the best-fitting stellar formation redshift is z(*) = 2.6(-0.4)(+0.9) for an Omega(m)=0.3, Omega(Lambda)=0.7 cosmology and a Salpeter initial mass function, corresponding to a luminosity-weighted age at the epoch of observation of similar to2 Gyr. The M/L ratios of these two galaxies are also in excellent agreement with predictions from models that include selection effects caused by morphological evolution (progenitor bias). The third galaxy is a factor of similar to10 less massive than the other two, shows strong Balmer absorption lines in its spectrum, and is offset from the Coma fundamental plane by 2.9 mag in rest-frame B. Larger samples are required to determine whether such young early-type galaxies are common in high-redshift clusters. Despite their large range in M/L ratios, all three galaxies fall in the extremely red object class with I-H>3 and R-K>5, and our results show that it is hazardous to use simple models for converting luminosity to mass for these objects. The work presented here, and previous mass measurements at lower redshift, can be considered first steps to empirically disentangle luminosity and mass evolution at the high-mass end of the galaxy population, lifting an important degeneracy in the interpretation of evolution of the luminosity function.

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