The evolution of the brightest cluster galaxies since z~1 from the ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS)
I.M. Whiley (1), A. Aragon-Salamanca (1) G. De Lucia (2) A. von der, Linden (2), S.P. Bamford (3), P. Best (4), M.N. Bremer (5), P. Jablonka (6),, O. Johnson (1,4), B. Milvang-Jensen (7,8), S. Noll (9), B.M. Poggianti (10),, G. Rudnick (2), R. Saglia (9), S. White (2)

TL;DR
This study shows that brightest cluster galaxies since z~1 have nearly constant stellar mass and luminosity, with weak dependence on cluster velocity dispersion, challenging some galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that BCG stellar mass has remained nearly unchanged since z~1, contradicting models predicting significant growth.
Findings
BCGs exhibit low scatter in K-band luminosity since z=1.
BCG stellar mass shows weak correlation with cluster velocity dispersion.
Observed stellar mass growth since z=1 is minimal, around 70%.
Abstract
[Abridged] We present K-band data for the brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) from the ESO Distant Cluster Survey. These data are combined with photometry from Aragon-Salamanca et al. (1998) and a low-redshift comparison sample from von der Linden et al. (2007). The K-band Hubble diagram for BCGs exhibits very low scatter (~0.35mag) since z=1. The colour and -band luminosity evolution of the BCGs are in good agreement with passively-evolving stellar populations formed at z>2. We do not detect any significant change in the stellar mass of the BCG since z~1. These results do not seem to depend on the velocity dispersion of the parent cluster. There is a correlation between the 1D velocity dispersion of the clusters and the K-band luminosity of the BCGs (after correcting for passive evolution). The clusters with large velocity dispersions tend to have brighter BCGs, i.e., BCGs with larger…
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