Measures of Galaxy Environment - I. What is "Environment"?
Stuart I. Muldrew, Darren J. Croton, Ramin A. Skibba, Frazer R., Pearce, Hong Bae Ann, Ivan K. Baldry, Sarah Brough, Yun-Young Choi,, Christopher J. Conselice, Nicolas B. Cowan, Anna Gallazzi, Meghan E. Gray,, Ruth Gr\"utzbauch, I-Hui Li, Changbom Park, Sergey V. Pilipenko

TL;DR
This paper compares twenty galaxy environment measures using a mock catalogue, revealing that different methods probe different scales and properties, emphasizing the importance of choosing the appropriate measure for specific environmental regimes.
Contribution
It systematically evaluates and contrasts various environment definitions, clarifying their scale sensitivities and implications for galaxy evolution studies.
Findings
Nearest neighbour measures probe high-mass halo densities.
Aperture methods identify high-density regions at super-halo scales.
Environment influences galaxy color, with measurement method affecting interpretation.
Abstract
The influence of a galaxy's environment on its evolution has been studied and compared extensively in the literature, although differing techniques are often used to define environment. Most methods fall into two broad groups: those that use nearest neighbours to probe the underlying density field and those that use fixed apertures. The differences between the two inhibit a clean comparison between analyses and leave open the possibility that, even with the same data, different properties are actually being measured. In this work we apply twenty published environment definitions to a common mock galaxy catalogue constrained to look like the local Universe. We find that nearest neighbour-based measures best probe the internal densities of high-mass haloes, while at low masses the inter-halo separation dominates and acts to smooth out local density variations. The resulting correlation…
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