The Evolution of the Field and Cluster Morphology-Density Relation for Mass-Selected Samples of Galaxies
A. van der Wel, B. P. Holden, M. Franx, G. D. Illingworth, M. P., Postman, D. D. Kelson, I. Labbe, S. Wuyts, J. P. Blakeslee, H. C. Ford

TL;DR
This study uses SDSS and GOODS-South data to analyze galaxy morphology and the morphology-density relation from redshift 0 to 1, finding that the relation remains constant over this period despite galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides evidence that the morphology-density relation for massive galaxies has remained unchanged since z~0.8, indicating stable morphological distributions over cosmic time.
Findings
The fraction of early-type galaxies remains constant since z~0.8.
The morphology-density relation for massive galaxies has not evolved significantly.
Red galaxy fraction and morphology are consistent across the studied redshift range.
Abstract
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and photometric/spectroscopic surveys in the GOODS-South field (the Chandra Deep Field-South, CDFS) are used to construct volume-limited, stellar mass-selected samples of galaxies at redshifts 0<z<1. The CDFS sample at 0.6<z<1.0 contains 207 galaxies complete down to M=4x10^10 Msol (for a ``diet'' Salpeter IMF), corresponding to a luminosity limit for red galaxies of M_B=-20.1. The SDSS sample at 0.020<z<0.045 contains 2003 galaxies down to the same mass limit, which corresponds to M_B=-19.3 for red galaxies. Morphologies are determined with an automated method, using the Sersic parameter n and a measure of the residual from the model fits, called ``bumpiness'', to distinguish different morphologies. These classifications are verified with visual classifications. In agreement with previous studies, 65-70% of the galaxies are located on the red…
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