The Different Physical Mechanisms that Drive the Star-Formation Histories of Giant and Dwarf Galaxies
C. P. Haines, A. Gargiulo, F. La Barbera, A. Mercurio, P. Merluzzi and, G. Busarello (INAF-OAC, Naples)

TL;DR
This study analyzes how star-formation and nuclear activity in galaxies depend on luminosity and environment, revealing different mechanisms driving galaxy evolution in giants versus dwarfs.
Contribution
It distinguishes the physical mechanisms influencing star-formation histories of giant and dwarf galaxies based on environmental and luminosity factors.
Findings
High-density regions have ~70% passive galaxies regardless of luminosity.
In low-density environments, passive dwarf galaxies are rare and mostly satellites.
AGN activity decreases with decreasing luminosity, mirroring passive galaxy fractions.
Abstract
We present an analysis of star-formation and nuclear activity in galaxies as a function of both luminosity and environment in the SDSS DR4 dataset. Using a sample of 27753 galaxies at 0.005<z<0.037 that is >90% complete to Mr=-18.0 we find that the EW(Ha) distribution is strongly bimodal, allowing galaxies to be robustly separated into passive and star-forming populations about a value EW(Ha)=2A. In high-density regions ~70% of galaxies are passive independent of luminosity. In the rarefied field however, the fraction of passively-evolving galaxies is a strong function of luminosity, dropping from ~50% for Mr<-21 to zero by Mr~-18. Indeed for the lowest luminosity range covered (-18<Mr<-16) none of the ~600 galaxies in the lowest density quartile are passive. The few passively-evolving dwarf galaxies in field regions appear as satellites to bright (~L*) galaxies. The fraction of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
