LoCuSS: The mid-infrared Butcher-Oemler effect
C. P. Haines, G. P. Smith, E. Egami, R. S. Ellis, S. M. Moran, A. J., R. Sanderson, P. Merluzzi, G. Busarello, R. J. Smith

TL;DR
This study investigates the increase in infrared-luminous star-forming galaxies in galaxy clusters from z=0.02 to 0.40, revealing a stronger evolution than in the field and linking it to galaxy infall and quenching processes.
Contribution
It provides the largest MIR cluster galaxy sample to date and models the evolution of star formation with redshift, highlighting the role of infall regions.
Findings
The fraction of IR-luminous galaxies increases with redshift from 3% to 10%.
Star formation in infalling galaxies is quenched upon first passage through clusters.
The evolution follows a (1+z)^5.7 trend, stronger than in the field.
Abstract
We study the mid-infrared (MIR) properties of galaxies in 30 massive galaxy clusters at 0.02<z<0.40, using panoramic Spitzer/MIPS 24micron and NIR data. This is the largest sample of clusters to date with MIR data covering not only the cluster cores, but extending into the infall regions. We revisit the Butcher-Oemler effect, measuring the fraction of massive infrared-luminous galaxies (K<K*+1.5, L_IR>5x10^10L_sun) within r_200, finding a steady increase in the fraction with redshift from ~3% at z=0.02 to ~10% by z=0.30, and an rms cluster-to-cluster scatter about this trend of 0.03. The best-fit redshift evolution model is of the form f_SF ~ (1+z)^5.7, which is stronger redshift evolution than that of L*_IR in both clusters and the field. We find that, statistically, this excess is associated with galaxies found at large cluster-centric radii, implying that the MIR Butcher-Oemler…
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