ArXiv TLDR

Galaxy Zoo Bar Lengths: A Catalogue of Measurements from Hubble Space Telescope Images and the Evolution of Galactic Bar Structure at z < 1

🐦 Tweet
2604.27100

Tenley Hutchinson-Smith, Brooke D. Simmons, Karen L. Masters, Alison Coil, Izzy Garland + 10 more

astro-ph.GA

TLDR

A new catalog of galactic bar lengths from HST images reveals how bar properties evolve and influence disk galaxy quenching at z < 1.

Key contributions

  • Presents bar length and width measurements for 8230 disk galaxies from HST surveys, primarily at z ≤ 1.
  • Finds barred galaxies with stellar mass ≥ 10^10 M⊙ are more quiescent, linking bars to slow quenching processes.
  • Shows median physical bar length increases with stellar mass, while relative bar strength remains stable across masses.
  • Observes bars are slightly weaker at higher redshift and longer/wider in quiescent galaxies, especially at lower z and higher masses.

Why it matters

This research provides a large catalog of galactic bar measurements from HST, crucial for understanding how these structures evolve and impact galaxy star formation. It confirms previous findings, solidifying the fundamental importance of bars in disk galaxy evolution.

Original Abstract

Understanding the role of galactic scale bars in disk galaxy evolution requires detailed measurements of bar properties across galaxies hosting bars at many redshifts. We present measurements of bar lengths and widths in a sample of 8230 disk galaxies from Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Legacy surveys. The highest-redshift barred galaxies in the sample have $z \sim 3$; most have $z \leq 1$. Using a mass-complete sample from the COSMOS field, we examine bar properties and evolution within $0.25 &lt; z &lt; 1$ in galaxies with stellar mass $\log(M_{\ast}/M_{\odot}) \geq 9.5$. The lowest-mass galaxies in our sample have similar star formation rate (SFR) distributions whether or not they host bars. For galaxies with $\log(M_{\ast}/M_{\odot}) \geq 10$, barred galaxies are more likely to be quiescent or quenched, consistent with bars mainly participating in slow quenching processes. The median physical bar length increases with increasing stellar mass. Relative bar lengths and widths (as a fraction of disk radius) peak at stellar mass $\log(M_{\ast}/M_{\odot}) \sim 10.25$, and change together with mass such that the median ratio, a proxy for bar strength, does not significantly change with stellar mass. Bars in our sample tend to be slightly ($\approx 13$%) weaker at higher redshift. Quiescent and quenching galaxies have longer and wider bars than those in galaxies on or above the star-forming sequence, especially at lower redshift and higher masses; at the low-mass end of our sample, starburst galaxies host relatively longer and stronger bars. Our findings are consistent with other results from studies at both higher and lower redshift, cementing the fundamental importance of bars in disk galaxy evolution.

📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest

Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.