Backsplash galaxies in isolated clusters
Kevin A. Pimbblet

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes backsplash galaxies in isolated clusters using SDSS data, providing a model for their fraction at different radii and supporting density-driven galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a method to differentiate backsplash from infalling galaxies using mixture modeling on a carefully selected SDSS cluster sample.
Findings
Fraction of backsplash galaxies decreases with radius.
Results align with density-driven galaxy evolution theories.
Method effectively distinguishes galaxy populations in clusters.
Abstract
At modest radii from the centre of galaxy clusters, individual galaxies may be infalling to the cluster for the first time, or have already visited the cluster core and are coming back out again. This latter population of galaxies is known as the backsplash population. Differentiating them from the infalling population presents an interesting challenge for observational studies of galaxy evolution. To attempt to do this, we assemble a sample of 14 redshift- and spatially-isolated galaxy clusters from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We clean this sample of cluster-cluster mergers to ensure that the galaxies contained within them are (to an approximation) only backsplashing from the centre of their parent clusters and are not being processed in sub-clumps. By stacking them together to form a composite cluster, we find evidence for both categories of galaxies at intermediate radii from the…
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