Environment and self-regulation in galaxy formation
Daniel Thomas (ICG Portsmouth), Claudia Maraston (ICG Portsmouth),, Kevin Schawinski (Yale), Marc Sarzi (Hertfordshire), Joseph Silk (Oxford)

TL;DR
This study investigates how environment influences the evolution of early-type galaxies, revealing a bimodal age distribution, environmental effects on rejuvenation, and that galaxy mass primarily drives key properties.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental impact on galaxy rejuvenation and demonstrates that galaxy mass, not environment, governs certain scaling relations in early-type galaxies.
Findings
Bimodal age distribution with a young galaxy peak at ~2.5 Gyr.
Rejuvenated galaxies are more common in lower mass and less dense environments.
Scaling relations of ages, metallicities, and alpha/Fe ratios depend on galaxy mass, not environment.
Abstract
The environment is known to affect the formation and evolution of galaxies considerably best visible through the well-known morphology-density relationship. In this paper we study the effect of environment on the evolution of early-type galaxies by analysing the stellar population properties of 3,360 galaxies morphologically selected by visual inspection from the SDSS in the redshift range 0.05<z<0.06. We find that the distribution of ages is bimodal with a strong peak at old ages and a secondary peak at young ages around ~ 2.5Gyr containing about 10 per cent of the objects. This is analogue to 'red sequence' and 'blue cloud' identified in galaxy populations usually containing both early and late type galaxies. The fraction of the young, rejuvenated galaxies increases with both decreasing galaxy mass and decreasing environmental density up to about 45 per cent. The rejuvenated galaxies…
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