The fraction of early-type galaxies in low redshift groups and clusters of galaxies
Ben Hoyle, Karen. L. Masters, Robert C. Nichol, Raul Jimenez, Steven, P. Bamford

TL;DR
This study finds that the fraction of early-type galaxies remains nearly constant across a wide range of halo masses in low redshift galaxy groups and clusters, indicating that morphological transformation mainly occurs before cluster assembly.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that the early-type galaxy fraction is independent of halo mass and compares these findings with simulations and previous studies.
Findings
Early-type galaxy fraction is constant across three orders of magnitude in halo mass.
The early-type fraction is higher among the most massive galaxies.
Simulations qualitatively match observed trends but over-predict massive bulge-dominated galaxies.
Abstract
We examine the fraction of early-type (and spiral) galaxies found in groups and clusters of galaxies as a function of dark matter halo mass. We use morphological classifications from the Galaxy Zoo project matched to halo masses from both the C4 cluster catalogue and the Yang et al (2007) group catalogue. We find that the fraction of early-type (or spiral) galaxies remains constant (changing by less than 10%) over three orders of magnitude in halo mass (13<log MH/Msol/h<15.8). This result is insensitive to our choice of halo mass measure, from velocity dispersions or summed optical luminosity. Furthermore, we consider the morphology-halo mass relations in bins of galaxy stellar mass M*, and find that while the trend of constant fraction remains unchanged, the early-type fraction amongst the most massive galaxies (11<log M*/Msol/h <12) is a factor of three greater than lower mass…
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