The First Mid-IR View of the Star-forming Properties of Nearby Galaxy Groups
Lei Bai, Jesper Rasmussen, John S. Mulchaey, Ali Dariush, Somak, Raychaudhury, Trevor J. Ponman

TL;DR
This study uses mid-infrared observations to analyze star formation in nearby galaxy groups, revealing that their star-forming galaxy fraction is intermediate between field and cluster environments and suggesting rapid suppression mechanisms.
Contribution
First mid-infrared analysis of galaxy groups in the nearby universe, providing new insights into star formation activity and environmental effects.
Findings
Star-forming galaxy fraction in groups is ~30% lower than in the field.
Star-forming galaxy fraction in groups is ~30% higher than in clusters.
Clusters contain massive, low-SFR galaxies possibly due to ram pressure stripping.
Abstract
We present the first mid-IR study of galaxy groups in the nearby Universe based on Spitzer MIPS observations of a sample of nine redshift-selected groups from the XMM-IMACS (XI) project, at z=0.06. We find that on average the star-forming (SF) galaxy fraction in the groups is about 30% lower than the value in the field and 30% higher than in clusters. The SF fractions do not show any systematic dependence on group velocity dispersion, total stellar mass, or the presence of an X-ray emitting intragroup medium, but a weak anti-correlation is seen between SF fraction and projected galaxy density. However, even in the densest regions, the SF fraction in groups is still higher than that in cluster outskirts, suggesting that preprocessing of galaxies in group environments is not sufficient to explain the much lower SF fraction in clusters. The typical specific star formation rates (SFR/M*) of…
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