The relation between star formation, morphology and local density in high redshift clusters and groups
Bianca M. Poggianti, Vandana Desai, Rose Finn, Steven Bamford,, Gabriella De Lucia, Jesus Varela, Alfonso Aragon-Salamanca, Claire Halliday,, Stefan Noll, Roberto Saglia, Dennis Zaritsky, Philip Best, Douglas Clowe, Bo, Milvang-Jensen, Pascale Jablonka, Roser Pello

TL;DR
This study explores how galaxy star formation and morphology relate to local density in high-redshift clusters, revealing that star formation activity is largely environment-independent at z=0.4-0.8, with some density-dependent trends in galaxy types.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the relationship between star formation, galaxy morphology, and local density at high redshift, highlighting differences from low-redshift universe studies.
Findings
Higher-density regions have fewer star-forming galaxies.
Average star formation rate peaks at intermediate densities in distant clusters.
Morphology-density relation is driven by late-type galaxies.
Abstract
We investigate how the [OII] properties and the morphologies of galaxies in clusters and groups at z=0.4-0.8 depend on projected local galaxy density, and compare with the field at similar redshifts and clusters at low-z. In both nearby and distant clusters, higher-density regions contain proportionally fewer star-forming galaxies, and the average [OII] equivalent width of star-forming galaxies is independent of local density. However, in distant clusters the average current star formation rate (SFR) in star-forming galaxies seems to peak at densities ~15-40 galaxies Mpc^{-2}. At odds with low-z results, at high-z the relation between star-forming fraction and local density varies from high- to low-mass clusters. Overall, our results suggest that at high-z the current star formation (SF) activity in star-forming galaxies does not depend strongly on global or local environment, though…
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