The stellar populations of early-type galaxies -- II. The effects of environment and mass
Craig Harrison, Matthew Colless, Harald Kuntschner, Warrick Couch,, Roberto De Propris, Michael Pracy

TL;DR
This study analyzes how environment and mass influence the stellar populations of early-type galaxies, finding mass to be the primary factor and revealing consistent properties across different cluster environments.
Contribution
It provides a spectroscopic analysis showing that galaxy mass predominantly determines stellar population characteristics, with environmental effects being minimal.
Findings
Stellar population parameters correlate with velocity dispersion.
Galaxies in clusters are homogeneous regardless of cluster richness.
Mass is the main driver of stellar population properties.
Abstract
The degree of influence that environment and mass have on the stellar populations of early-type galaxies is uncertain. In this paper we present the results of a spectroscopic analysis of the stellar populations of early-type galaxies aimed at addressing this question. The sample of galaxies is drawn from four clusters, with <z>=0.04, and their surrounding structure extending to ~10R_{vir}. We find that the distributions of the absorption-line strengths and the stellar population parameters age, metallicity and alpha-element abundance ratio do not differ significantly between the clusters and their outskirts, but the tight correlations found between these quantities and velocity dispersion within the clusters are weaker in their outskirts. All three stellar population parameters of cluster galaxies are positively correlated with velocity dispersion. Galaxies in clusters form a…
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