Evidence for Morphology and Luminosity Transformation of Galaxies at High Redshifts
Ho Seong Hwang, Changbom Park (Korea Institute for Advanced Study)

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy morphology and luminosity evolve with redshift, revealing that galaxy interactions influence their transformation, especially in dense regions, over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides new evidence of morphology conformity within dark matter halos and details the evolution of the morphology-density relation up to redshift 1.
Findings
Morphology conformity is confined within virialized regions.
Early-type galaxy probability increases near early-type neighbors.
Morphology-density relation weakens at z≈1.
Abstract
We study the galaxy morphology-luminosity-environmental relation and its redshift evolution using a spectroscopic sample of galaxies in the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS). In the redshift range of we detect conformity in morphology between neighboring galaxies. The realm of conformity is confined within the virialized region associated with each galaxy plus dark matter halo system. When a galaxy is located within the virial radius of its nearest neighbor galaxy, its morphology strongly depends on the neighbor's distance and morphology: the probability for a galaxy to be an early type () strongly increases as it approaches an early-type neighbor, but tends to decrease as it approaches a late-type neighbor. We find that evolves much faster in high density regions than in low density regions, and that the morphology-density relation becomes…
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