Morphological Composition of z~0.4 groups: The site of S0 formation
D. J. Wilman (1), A. Oemler Jr (2), J. S. Mulchaey (2), S. L. McGee, (3), M. L. Balogh (3), R. G. Bower (4) ((1) MPE, Garching, Germany, (2), Carnegie Observatories, Pasadena, (3) University of Waterloo, Canada, (4), University of Durham, U.K.)

TL;DR
This study uses HST data to analyze galaxy morphologies at z~0.4, revealing that groups significantly contribute to S0 galaxy formation through minor mergers and interactions, independent of the intra-group medium.
Contribution
It demonstrates that galaxy groups are key sites for S0 formation at z~0.4, highlighting mechanisms like minor mergers and harassment over IGM interactions.
Findings
Groups have a higher S0 fraction than the field.
S0 formation occurs outside group cores.
Elliptical fractions are similar in groups and field.
Abstract
The low redshift Universe (z<~0.5) is not a dull place. Processes leading to the suppression of star formation and morphological transformation are prevalent: this is particularly evident in the dramatic upturn in the fraction of S0-type galaxies in clusters. However, until now, the process and environment of formation has remained unidentified. We present a HST-based morphological analysis of galaxies in the redshift-space selected group and field environments at z~0.4. Groups contain a much higher fraction of S0s at fixed luminosity than the lower density field, with >99.999% confidence. Indeed the S0 fraction in groups is at least as high as in z~0.4 clusters and X-ray selected groups, which have more luminous Intra Group Medium (IGM). An 97% confident excess of S0s at >=0.3Mpc from the group centre at fixed luminosity, tells us that formation is not restricted to, and possibly even…
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