Hubble Space Telescope survey of the Perseus Cluster -III: The effect of local environment on dwarf galaxies
Samantha J. Penny, Christopher J. Conselice, Sven De Rijcke, Enrico V., Held, John S. Gallagher III, Robert W. O'Connell

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble Space Telescope data to analyze how the environment within the Perseus Cluster influences the properties and evolution of dwarf galaxies, revealing environmental effects on their structure, color, and survival.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental impact on dwarf galaxy morphology, color, and survival, especially in the cluster outskirts versus the core.
Findings
Dwarfs in the outskirts are more morphologically disturbed than in the core.
Dwarfs in the outskirts lie on the same red sequence as core dwarfs.
Outer regions have more low-mass dwarfs than the core.
Abstract
We present the results of a Hubble Space Telescope (HST) study of dwarf galaxies in the outer regions of the nearby rich Perseus Cluster, down to M_V = -12, and compare these with the dwarf population in the cluster core from our previous HST imaging. In this paper we examine how properties such as the colour magnitude relation, structure and morphology are affected by environment for the lowest mass galaxies. Dwarf galaxies are excellent tracers of the effects of environment due to their low masses, allowing us to derive their environmentally based evolution, which is more subtle in more massive galaxies. We identify 11 dwarf elliptical (dE) and dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxies in the outer regions of Perseus, all of which are previously unstudied. We measure the (V-I)_0 colours of our newly discovered dEs, and find that these dwarfs lie on the same red sequence as those in the cluster…
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