A multiscale approach to environment and its influence on the colour distribution of galaxies
David Wilman (1), Stefano Zibetti (2), Tamas Budavari (3) ((1) MPE,, Garching, Germany, (2) MPIA, Heidelberg, Germany, (3) The Johns Hopkins, University, Baltimore, MD, USA)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a multiscale density measurement method to study galaxy colour distribution, revealing how galaxy environment on different scales influences galaxy colour bimodality and star formation activity.
Contribution
It presents a novel multiscale approach to galaxy density measurement, avoiding assumptions of group catalogues, and applies it to analyze galaxy colour bimodality dependence on environment.
Findings
Red galaxies are more common in denser, smaller-scale environments.
Galaxy colours and fractions depend on environment scales below 1 Mpc.
Large-scale environment (>2 Mpc) anti-correlates with galaxy colour properties.
Abstract
We present a multiscale approach to measurements of galaxy density, applied to a volume-limited sample constructed from SDSS DR5. We populate a rich parameter space by obtaining independent measurements of density on different scales for each galaxy, avoiding the implicit assumptions involved, e.g., in the construction of group catalogues. As the first application of this method, we study how the bimodality in galaxy colour distribution (u-r) depends on multiscale density. The u-r galaxy colour distribution is described as the sum of two gaussians (red and blue) with five parameters: the fraction of red galaxies (f_r) and the position and width of the red and blue peaks (mu_r, mu_b, sigma_r and sigma_b). Galaxies mostly react to their smallest scale (< 0.5 Mpc) environments: in denser environments red galaxies are more common (larger f_r), redder (larger mu_r) and with a narrower…
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