The role of environment in the morphological transformation of galaxies in 9 intermediate redshift clusters
M.Huertas-Company, G.Foex, G.Soucail, R.Pello

TL;DR
This study investigates how environment influences galaxy morphology in 9 intermediate-redshift clusters, revealing that massive early-type galaxies are already established in clusters by z~0.5, while lower-mass galaxies are still evolving.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental dependence of galaxy morphological transformation at intermediate redshifts, especially highlighting the role of galaxy mass and location within clusters.
Findings
Massive early-type galaxies are already in place at z~0.5.
Galaxy evolution in clusters mainly affects lower-mass galaxies.
Morphological transformation is driven by galaxy interactions in outskirts.
Abstract
[abridged] We analyze a sample of 9 massive clusters at 0.4<z<0.6 observed with MegaCam in 4 photometric bands (g,r,i,z) from the core to a radius of 5 Mpc (~4000 galaxies). Galaxy cluster candidates are selected using photometric redshifts computed with HyperZ. Morphologies are estimated with galSVM in two broad morphological types (early-type and late-type). We examine the morphological composition of the red-sequence and the blue-cloud and study the relations between galaxies and their environment through the morphology-density relations (T-Sigma) and the morphology-radius relation (T-R) in a mass limited sample (log(M/Msol)>9.5). We find that the red sequence is already in place at z~0.5 and it is mainly composed of very massive (log(M/Msol)>11.3) early-type galaxies. These massive galaxies seem to be already formed when they enter the cluster, probably in infalling groups, since…
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