Abstract

Recent studies have indicated that the ratio between half-mass and half-light radii, r mass/r light, varies significantly as a function of stellar mass and redshift, complicating the interpretation of the ubiquitous r light − M * relation. To investigate, in this study we construct the light and color profiles of ∼3000 galaxies at 1 < z < 2 with using imcascade, a Bayesian implementation of the Multi-Gaussian Expansion (MGE) technique. imcascade flexibly represents galaxy profiles using a series of Gaussians, free of any a priori parameterization. We find that both star-forming and quiescent galaxies have, on average, negative color gradients. For star-forming galaxies, we find steeper gradients that evolve with redshift and correlate with dust content. Using the color gradients as a proxy for gradients in the M/L ratio, we measure half-mass radii for our sample of galaxies. There is significant scatter in individual r mass/r light ratios, which is correlated with variation in the color gradients. We find that the median r mass/r light ratio evolves from 0.75 at z = 2 to 0.5 at z = 1, consistent with previous results. We characterize the r mass − M * relation, and we find that it has a shallower slope and shows less redshift evolution than the r light − M * relation. This applies both to star-forming and quiescent galaxies. We discuss some of the implications of using r mass instead of r light, including an investigation of the size−inclination bias and a comparison to numerical simulations.

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