SPIDER - III. Environmental Dependence of the Fundamental Plane of Early-type Galaxies
F. La Barbera, P.A.A. Lopes, R.R. de Carvalho, I.G. de la Rosa, A.A., Berlind

TL;DR
This study investigates how the Fundamental Plane relation of early-type galaxies varies with environment, revealing that galaxies in low-density regions are younger and have lower mass-to-light ratios than those in dense clusters, with implications for galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the environmental dependence of the Fundamental Plane across optical and near-infrared bands, highlighting age and metallicity variations with environment.
Findings
Galaxies in low-density regions have younger luminosity-weighted ages.
The FP intercept decreases smoothly from high to low density environments.
Age variation of about 11% per decade of local galaxy density.
Abstract
We analyse the Fundamental Plane (FP) relation of early-type galaxies (ETGs) in the optical (griz) and ETGs in the Near-Infrared (YJHK) wavebands, forming an opticalNIR sample of galaxies. We focus on the analysis of the FP as a function of the environment where galaxies reside. We characterise the environment using the largest group catalogue, based on 3D data, generated from SDSS at low redshift (). We find that the intercept of the FP decreases smoothly from high to low density regions, implying that galaxies at low density have on average lower mass-to-light ratios than their high-density counterparts. The also decreases as a function of the mean characteristic mass of the parent galaxy group. However, this trend is weak and completely accounted for by the variation of with local density. The variation of the FP offset is…
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