The dependence of star formation activity on environment and stellar mass at z~1 from the HiZELS H-alpha survey
David Sobral, Philip Best, Ian Smail, James Geach, Michele Cirasuolo,, Timothy Garn, Gavin B. Dalton

TL;DR
This study investigates how star formation activity at redshift ~1 depends on galaxy stellar mass and environment, revealing that mass primarily influences star formation, while environment modulates activity especially in lower-mass galaxies and dense regions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of star formation dependence on mass and environment at z~1 using large, panoramic survey data, clarifying previous conflicting observations.
Findings
Star formation declines with increasing stellar mass at z~1.
Environmental density suppresses star formation, especially in high-density regions.
Median SFR increases with environment in low to moderate densities for low-mass galaxies.
Abstract
(Abridged) This paper presents an environment and stellar mass study of a large sample of star-forming (SF) galaxies at z=0.84 from the HiZELS survey, over 1.3 deg^2 in the COSMOS and UKIDSS UDS fields. By taking advantage of a truly panoramic coverage, from the field to a rich cluster, it is shown that both mass and environment play crucial roles in determining the properties of SF galaxies. The median specific SFR declines with mass in all environments, and the fraction of galaxies forming stars declines from ~40%, for M~10^10M_sun to effectively zero at M>10^11.5M_sun, confirming that mass-downsizing is generally in place by z~1. The fraction of SF galaxies also falls as a function of local environmental density from ~40% in the field to approaching zero at rich group/cluster densities. When SF does occur in high density regions, it is merger-dominated and, if only non-merging SF…
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