The Assembly of the Red Sequence at z~1: The Color and Spectral Properties of Galaxies in the Cl1604 Supercluster
Brian C. Lemaux, Roy R. Gal, Lori M. Lubin, Dale D. Kocevski,, Christopher D. Fassnacht, Elizabeth J. McGrath, Gordon K. Squires, Jason A., Surace, Mark Lacy

TL;DR
This study examines the properties and evolution of galaxies within the Cl1604 supercluster at z~0.9, revealing insights into the buildup of the red sequence and galaxy transformation processes in high-redshift environments.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectroscopic and imaging analysis of galaxy populations in a supercluster at z~1, highlighting the role of environment in galaxy evolution and red sequence formation.
Findings
Most massive red galaxies are in clusters and groups.
Star formation activity is higher in groups than in clusters.
Massive red galaxies likely form through mergers at later times.
Abstract
We investigate the properties of the 525 spectroscopically confirmed members of the Cl1604 supercluster at z~0.9 as part of the Observations of Redshift Evolution in Large Scale Environments (ORELSE) survey. Using extensive Keck LRIS/DEIMOS spectroscopy in conjunction with ten-band ground-based, Spitzer, and HST imaging, we investigate the buildup of the red sequence in groups and clusters at high redshift. Nearly all of the brightest and most massive red-sequence galaxies are found within the bounds of the clusters and groups. Despite the prevalence of these red-sequence galaxies, we find that the average cluster galaxy has a spectrum indicative of a star-forming galaxy, with a star formation rate between those of z~1 field galaxies and moderate redshift cluster galaxies. The average group galaxy is even more active, exhibiting properties indicative of a starburst. The presence of…
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