A snapshot on galaxy evolution occurring in the Great Wall: the role of Nurture at z=0
Giuseppe Gavazzi, Mattia Fumagalli, Olga Cucciati, Alessandro Boselli

TL;DR
This study investigates how environmental factors influence galaxy evolution at z=0 within the Great Wall, revealing that low luminosity galaxies undergo significant transformations driven by their surroundings, especially in denser regions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of galaxy morphology, color, and luminosity distributions across different environments in the Great Wall, highlighting the environmental impact on galaxy evolution at low redshift.
Findings
Early-type galaxy fraction increases with density.
Red sequence exists in all environments at high luminosity.
Low luminosity galaxies are mostly late-type in low-density regions.
Abstract
With the aim of quantifying the contribution of the environment on the evolution of galaxies at z=0 we have used the DR7 catalogue of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to reconstruct the 3-D distribution of 4132 galaxies in 420 square degrees of the Coma supercluster, containing two rich clusters (Coma and A1367), several groups, and many filamentary structures belonging to the "Great Wall", at the approximate distance of 100 Mpc. At this distance the galaxy census is complete to Mi=-17.5 mag, i.e. approx 4 mag fainter than M*. The morphological classification of galaxies into early- (ellipticals) and late-types (spirals) was carried out by inspection of individual SDSS images and spectra. The density around each galaxies was determined in cylinders of 1 Mpc radius and 1000 km s^-1 half length. The color-luminosity relation was derived for galaxies in bins morphological type and in…
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