The Star Formation Rate-Density Relation at 0.6<z<0.9 and the Role of Star Forming Galaxies
Shannon G. Patel (1,2), Daniel D. Kelson (3), Bradford P. Holden (1),, Marijn Franx (2), Garth D. Illingworth (1), ((1) UCSC, (2) Leiden, (3), Carnegie)

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy star formation rates decrease with local density at redshifts 0.6 to 0.9, revealing that both the decline in SFRs of star-forming galaxies and the increasing fraction of quiescent galaxies contribute to this trend.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the SFR-density relation at intermediate redshifts using multiple indicators and distinguishes the effects of galaxy type and environment on star formation activity.
Findings
SFRs decline by factors of 4 to 10 from field to dense environments.
The fraction of quiescent galaxies increases from 32% to 79% with density.
Decline in SFRs of star-forming galaxies is significant and environment-dependent.
Abstract
We study the star formation rates (SFRs) of galaxies as a function of local galaxy density at 0.6<z<0.9. We used a low-dispersion prism in IMACS on the 6.5-m Baade (Magellan I) telescope to obtain spectra and measured redshifts to a precision of sigma_z/(1+z)=1% for galaxies with z<23.3 AB mag. We utilized a stellar mass-limited sample of 977 galaxies above M>1.8x10^{10} Msun to conduct our main analysis. With three different SFR indicators, (1) Spitzer MIPS 24-micron imaging, (2) SED fitting, and (3) [OII]3727 emission, we find the median specific SFR (SSFR) and SFR to decline from the low-density field to the cores of groups and a rich cluster. For the SED and [OII] based SFRs, the decline in SSFR is roughly an order of magnitude while for the MIPS based SFRs, the decline is a factor of ~4. We find approximately the same magnitude of decline in SSFR even after removing the sample of…
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