The Cosmic Web and galaxy evolution around the most luminous X-ray cluster: RXJ1347.5-1145
M. Verdugo, M. Lerchster, H. Boehringer, H. Hildebrandt, B. L., Ziegler, T. Erben, A. Finoguenov, and G. Chon

TL;DR
This study examines the large-scale structures and galaxy evolution around the luminous X-ray cluster RXJ1347.5-1145 at z=0.45, revealing environmental effects on galaxy properties and the dynamic nature of galaxy transformation in cluster environments.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the large-scale structure and galaxy content around RXJ1347, highlighting the environmental dependence of galaxy properties and the evolutionary processes in groups and clusters.
Findings
Large-scale structure extends 20 Mpc in NE-SW direction.
Blue galaxy fraction depends on galaxy density, especially in massive systems.
UV-bright galaxy fraction remains constant across environments.
Abstract
In this paper we study the large scale structures and their galaxy content around the most X-ray luminous cluster known, RX J1347.5-1145 at z=0.45. We make use of ugriz CFHT MEGACAM photometry and VIMOS VLT spectroscopy to identify structures around the RXJ1347 on a scale of 20x20 Mpc2. We construct maps of the galaxy distribution and the fraction of blue galaxies. We study the photometric galaxy properties as a function of environment, traced by the galaxy density. We identify group candidates based on galaxy overdensities and study their galaxy content. We also use available GALEX NUV imaging to identify strong unobscured star forming galaxies. We find that the large scale structure around RXJ1347 extends in the NE-SW direction for at least 20 Mpc, in which most of the group candidates are located. As other studies, we find that the fraction of blue galaxies (Fblue) is a function of…
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