Deprojecting the quenching of star formation in and near clusters
G. A. Mamon, S. Mahajan, S. Raychaudhury

TL;DR
This study investigates how star formation activity in galaxies near clusters varies with position and velocity, revealing that quenching occurs rapidly during a galaxy's first passage through a cluster.
Contribution
It introduces a new model linking galaxy phase space position and velocity to star formation activity, improving understanding of quenching processes in cluster environments.
Findings
Star formation fraction increases with radius and saturates
Higher star formation in galaxies with higher line-of-sight velocity
Quenching of star formation occurs rapidly during first cluster passage
Abstract
Using H_delta and D_n4000 as tracers of recent or ongoing efficient star formation, we analyze the fraction of SDSS galaxies with recent or ongoing efficient star formation (GORES) in the vicinity of 268 clusters. We confirm the well-known segregation of star formation, and using Abel deprojection, we find that the fraction of GORES increases linearly with physical radius and then saturates. Moreover, we find that the fraction of GORES is modulated by the absolute line-of-sight velocity (ALOSV): at all projected radii, higher fractions of GORES are found in higher ALOSV galaxies. We model this velocity modulation of GORES fraction using the particles in a hydrodynamical cosmological simulation, which we classify into virialized, infalling and backsplash according to their position in radial phase space at z=0. Our simplest model, where the GORES fraction is only a function of class does…
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