4.6 Article

THE STELLAR VELOCITY DISPERSION OF A COMPACT MASSIVE GALAXY AT z=1.80 USING X-SHOOTER: CONFIRMATION OF THE EVOLUTION IN THE MASS-SIZE AND MASS-DISPERSION RELATIONS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 736, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/2041-8205/736/1/L9

Keywords

galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation; galaxies: structure

Funding

  1. NASA [NAS 5-26555]
  2. Netherlands Foundation for Research (NWO)
  3. NASA through Space Telescope Science Institute [HST-GO-12167.1]

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Recent photometric studies have shown that early-type galaxies at fixed stellar mass were smaller and denser at earlier times. In this Letter, we assess that finding by deriving the dynamical mass of such a compact quiescent galaxy at z = 1.8. We have obtained a high-quality spectrum with full UV-NIR wavelength coverage of galaxy NMBS-C7447 using X-Shooter on the Very Large Telescope. We determined a velocity dispersion of 294 +/- 51 km s(-1). Given this velocity dispersion and the effective radius of 1.64 +/- 0.15 kpc (as determined from Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 F160W observations) we derive a dynamical mass of (1.7 +/- 0.5) x 10(11) M-circle dot. Comparison of the full spectrum with stellar population synthesis models indicates that NMBS-C774 has a relatively young stellar population (0.40 Gyr) with little or no star formation and a stellar mass of M-star similar to 1.5 x 10(11) M-circle dot. The dynamical and photometric stellar masses are in good agreement. Thus, our study supports the conclusion that the mass densities of quiescent galaxies were indeed higher at earlier times, and this earlier result is not caused by systematic measurement errors. By combining available spectroscopic measurements at different redshifts, we find that the velocity dispersion at fixed dynamical mass was a factor of similar to 1.8 higher at z = 1.8 compared with z = 0. Finally, we show that the apparent discrepancies between the few available velocity dispersion measurements at z > 1.5 are consistent with the intrinsic scatter of the mass-size relation.

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