Mass and environment as drivers of galaxy evolution in SDSS and zCOSMOS and the origin of the Schechter function
Y. Peng, S.J. Lilly, K. Kovac, M. Bolzonella, L. Pozzetti, A. Renzini,, G. Zamorani, O. Ilbert, C. Knobel, A. Iovino, C. Maier, O. Cucciati, L., Tasca, C. M. Carollo, J. Silverman, P. Kampczyk, L. de Ravel, D. Sanders, N., Scoville, T. Contini, V. Mainieri, M. Scodeggio

TL;DR
This study investigates how mass and environment independently influence galaxy evolution up to redshift 1, proposing a simple model that explains the observed galaxy mass functions and their evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking mass and environment quenching processes to the shape of galaxy mass functions, supported by SDSS and zCOSMOS data.
Findings
Mass-quenching and environment-quenching are separable up to z ~ 1.
The mass function of star-forming galaxies remains nearly constant over time.
The model reproduces observed galaxy age and abundance trends.
Abstract
We explore the inter-relationships between mass, star-formation rate and environment in the SDSS, zCOSMOS and other surveys. The differential effects of mass and environment are completely separable to z ~ 1, indicating that two distinct processes are operating, "mass-quenching" and "environment-quenching". Environment-quenching, at fixed over-density, evidently does not change with epoch to z ~ 1, suggesting that it occurs as large-scale structure develops in the Universe. The observed constancy of the mass-function shape for star-forming galaxies, demands that the mass-quenching of galaxies around and above M*, must be proportional to their star-formation rates at all z < 2. We postulate that this simple mass-quenching law also holds over a much broader range of stellar mass and epoch. These two simple quenching processes, plus some additional quenching due to merging, then naturally…
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