First Look at z > 1 Bars in the Rest-Frame Near-Infrared with JWST Early CEERS Imaging
Stellar bars are key drivers of secular evolution in galaxies and can be effectively studied using rest-frame near-infrared (NIR) images, which trace the underlying stellar mass and are less impacted by dust and star formation than rest-frame UV or optical images. We leverage the power of {\it{JWST}...
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Veröffentlicht in: | arXiv.org 2022-12 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Stellar bars are key drivers of secular evolution in galaxies and can be effectively studied using rest-frame near-infrared (NIR) images, which trace the underlying stellar mass and are less impacted by dust and star formation than rest-frame UV or optical images. We leverage the power of {\it{JWST}} CEERS NIRCam images to present the first quantitative identification and characterization of stellar bars at \(z>1\) based on rest-frame NIR F444W images of high resolution (~1.3 kpc at z ~ 1-3). We identify stellar bars in these images using quantitative criteria based on ellipse fits. For this pilot study, we present six examples of robustly identified bars at \(z>1\) with spectroscopic redshifts, including the two highest redshift bars at ~2.136 and 2.312 quantitatively identified and characterized to date. The stellar bars at \(z\) ~ 1.1-2.3 presented in our study have projected semi-major axes of ~2.9-4.3 kpc and projected ellipticities of ~0.41-0.53 in the rest-frame NIR. The barred host galaxies have stellar masses ~ \( 1 \times 10^{10}\) to \(2 \times 10^{11}\) \(M_{\odot}\), star formation rates of ~ 21-295 \(M_{\odot}\) yr\(^{-1}\), and several have potential nearby companions. Our finding of bars at \(z\) ~1.1-2.3 demonstrates the early onset of such instabilities and supports simulations where bars form early in massive dynamically cold disks. It also suggests that if these bars at lookback times of 8-10 Gyr survive out to present epochs, bar-driven secular processes may operate over a long time and have a significant impact on some galaxies by z ~ 0. |
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ISSN: | 2331-8422 |
DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2210.08658 |