Mass and Redshift Dependence of Star Formation in Relaxed Galaxy Clusters
Rose A. Finn (Siena College), Michael L. Balogh (U. Waterloo), Dennis, Zaritsky (U. Arizona), Christopher J. Miller (CTIO), Robert C. Nichol (U., Portsmouth)

TL;DR
This study examines how star formation in relaxed galaxy clusters depends on cluster mass and redshift, finding that star formation declines over billions of years independently of cluster mass, with environmental effects being modest.
Contribution
It demonstrates that star formation rates in relaxed galaxy clusters decline over time independently of cluster mass, providing insights into galaxy evolution in dense environments.
Findings
Star formation scales linearly with the number of member galaxies.
No residual dependence of star formation on cluster velocity dispersion.
Star formation rates decline by a factor of 10 since z=0.75.
Abstract
We investigate the star-formation properties of dynamically relaxed galaxy clusters as a function of cluster mass for 308 low-redshift clusters drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) C4 cluster catalog. It is important to establish if cluster star-formation properties have a mass dependence before comparing clusters at different epochs, and here we use cluster velocity dispersion as a measure of cluster mass. We find that the total stellar mass, the number of star-forming galaxies, and total star-formation rate scale linearly with the number of member galaxies, with no residual dependence on cluster velocity dispersion. With the mass-dependence of cluster star-formation rates established, we compare the SDSS clusters with a sample of z = 0.75 clusters from the literature and find that on average the total H-alpha luminosity of the high-redshift clusters is 10 times greater than…
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