zCOSMOS 10k-bright spectroscopic sample: exploring mass and environment dependence in early-type galaxies
M. Moresco, L. Pozzetti, A. Cimatti, G. Zamorani, M. Mignoli, S. Di, Cesare, M. Bolzonella, E. Zucca, S. Lilly, K. Kovac, M. Scodeggio, P., Cassata, L. Tasca, D. Vergani, C. Halliday, M. Carollo, T. Contini, J.-P., Kneib, O. Le Fevre, V. Mainieri, A. Renzini, S. Bardelli

TL;DR
This study analyzes how mass and environment influence the properties of early-type galaxies up to redshift 1, finding mass to be the primary factor affecting galaxy evolution with minimal environmental impact.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of color and spectral features of early-type galaxies as a function of mass and environment, highlighting the dominant role of mass in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Color depends strongly on mass, weakly on environment.
Spectral features like D4000 show mass dependence, minimal environment effect.
Evidence supports a downsizing scenario where massive galaxies form earlier.
Abstract
We present the analysis of the U-V rest-frame color distribution and some spectral features as a function of mass and environment for two sample of early-type galaxies up to z=1 extracted from the zCOSMOS spectroscopic survey. The first sample ("red galaxies") is defined with a photometric classification, while the second ("ETGs") by combining morphological, photometric, and spectroscopic properties to obtain a more reliable sample. We find that the color distribution of red galaxies is not strongly dependent on environment for all mass bins, with galaxies in overdense regions redder than galaxies in underdense regions with a difference of 0.027\pm0.008 mag. The dependence on mass is far more significant, with average colors of massive galaxies redder by 0.093\pm0.007 mag than low-mass galaxies throughout the entire redshift range. We study the color-mass relation, finding a mean slope…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Remote Sensing in Agriculture · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
