Transformation of Morphology and Luminosity Classes of the SDSS Galaxies
Changbom Park, J. Richard Gott III, Yun-Young Choi

TL;DR
This paper investigates how galaxy morphology and luminosity evolve based on local environment, neighbor interactions, and large-scale density, revealing complex dependencies and transformation processes.
Contribution
It provides a unified model explaining galaxy morphology and luminosity evolution considering local and large-scale environmental effects.
Findings
Galaxy morphology depends on luminosity, local density, and neighbor proximity.
Morphology transformation is influenced by neighbor's type and environment.
Luminosity correlates with local neighbor density and merger history.
Abstract
We present a unified picture on the evolution of galaxy luminosity and morphology. Galaxy morphology is found to depend critically on the local environment set up by the nearest neighbor galaxy in addition to luminosity and the large scale density. When a galaxy is located farther than the virial radius from its closest neighbor, the probability for the galaxy to have an early morphological type is an increasing function only of luminosity and the local density due to the nearest neighbor (). The tide produced by the nearest neighbor is thought to be responsible for the morphology transformation toward the early type at these separations. When the separation is less than the virial radius, i.e. when , its morphology depends also on the neighbor's morphology and the large-scale background density over a few Mpc scales () in addition to…
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