The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Jan 2024)

JWST Reveals Bulge-dominated Star-forming Galaxies at Cosmic Noon

  • Chloë E. Benton,
  • Erica J. Nelson,
  • Tim B. Miller,
  • Rachel Bezanson,
  • Justus Gibson,
  • Abigail I Hartley,
  • Marco Martorano,
  • Sedona H. Price,
  • Katherine A. Suess,
  • Arjen van der Wel,
  • Pieter van Dokkum,
  • John R. Weaver,
  • Katherine E. Whitaker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ad7e27
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 974, no. 2
p. L28

Abstract

Read online

Hubble Space Telescope imaging shows that most star-forming galaxies at cosmic noon—the peak of cosmic star formation history—appear disk-dominated, leaving the origin of the dense cores in their quiescent descendants unclear. With the James Webb Space Telescope’s high-resolution imaging to 5 μ m, we can now map the rest-frame near-infrared emission, a much closer proxy for stellar mass distribution, in these massive galaxies. We selected 70 star-forming galaxies with 10 < log( M ) < 12 and 1.5 < z < 3 in the CEERS survey and compare their morphologies in the rest-frame optical to those in the rest-frame near-IR. While the bulk of these galaxies are disk-dominated in 1.5 μ m (rest-frame optical) imaging, they appear more bulge-dominated at 4.4 μ m (rest-frame near-infrared). Our analysis reveals that in massive star-forming galaxies at z ∼ 2, the radial surface brightness profiles steepen significantly, from a slope of ∼0.3 dex ^−1 at 1.5 μ m to ∼1.4 dex ^−1 at 4.4 μ m within radii <1 kpc. Additionally, we find their total flux contained within the central 1 kpc is approximately 7 times higher in F444W than in F150W. In rest-optical emission, a galaxy’s central surface density appears to be the strongest indicator of whether it is quenched or star-forming. Our most significant finding is that at redder wavelengths, the central surface density ratio between quiescent and star-forming galaxies dramatically decreases from ∼10 to ∼1. This suggests the high central densities associated with galaxy quenching are already in place during the star-forming phase, imposing new constraints on the transition from star formation to quiescence.

Keywords