The effect of the environment on the gas kinematics and the structure of distant galaxies
Yara L. Jaff\'e, Alfonso Arag\'on-Salamanca, Harald Kuntschner, Steven, Bamford, Carlos Hoyos, Gabriella De Lucia, Claire Halliday, Bo, Milvang-Jensen, Bianca Poggianti, Gregory Rudnick, Roberto P. Saglia,, Patricia Sanchez-Blazquez, Dennis Zaritsky

TL;DR
This study investigates how the environment influences gas and stellar properties in distant galaxies, revealing that cluster environments disturb gas kinematics and truncate gas disks, affecting star formation and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new insights into environmental effects on gas kinematics and star formation, highlighting the role of the intracluster medium over galaxy-galaxy interactions.
Findings
Kinematically-disturbed galaxies are more common in clusters.
Gas disks in cluster galaxies are truncated, concentrating star formation.
Physical mechanisms involve the intracluster medium, not strong morphological disturbances.
Abstract
With the aim of distinguishing between possible physical mechanisms acting on galaxies when they fall into clusters, we study the properties of the gas and the stars in a sample of 422 emission-line galaxies from EDisCS in different environments up to z~1. We identify galaxies with kinematical disturbances (from emission-lines in their 2D spectra) and find that they are more frequent in clusters than in the field. The fraction of kinematically-disturbed galaxies increases with cluster velocity dispersion and decreases with distance from the cluster centre, but remains constant with projected galaxy density. We also studied morphological disturbances in the stellar light from HST/F814W images, finding that the fraction of morphologically disturbed galaxies is similar in all environments. Moreover, there is little correlation between the presence of kinematically-disturbed gas and…
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