The galaxy stellar mass function and its evolution with time show no dependence on global environment
Benedetta Vulcani (1,2), Bianca M. Poggianti (2), August Oemler, Jr.(3), Alan Dressler (3), Alfonso Aragon-Salamanca (4), Gabriella De Lucia, (5), Alessia Moretti (1,2), Mike Gladders (6), Louis Abramson (6), Claire, Halliday (7) ((1) Astronomical Department, Padova University

TL;DR
This study finds that the galaxy stellar mass function's shape and evolution are consistent across different environments and do not depend on whether galaxies are in clusters, groups, or the field, from z~0.8 to the present.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the galaxy stellar mass function's shape and its evolution over time are environment-independent, extending previous findings to slightly lower mass galaxies.
Findings
Mass distribution shape is similar across environments.
Evolution shows an increase in low-mass galaxies over time.
No significant differences in mass functions within or outside virialized regions.
Abstract
We present the analysis of the galaxy stellar mass function in different environments at intermediate redshift (0.3<z<0.8) for two mass-limited galaxy samples. We use the IMACS Cluster Building Survey (ICBS), at masses M_ast >10^(10.5) M_sun, to study cluster, group, and field galaxies at z=0.3-0.45, and the ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS), at masses M_ast > 10^(10.2) M_sun, to investigate cluster and group galaxies at z=0.4-0.8. Therefore, in our analysis we include galaxies that are slightly less massive than the Milky Way. Having excluded the brightest cluster galaxies, we show thatthe shape of the mass distribution does not seem to depend on global environment. Our two main results are: (1) Galaxies in the virialized regions of clusters, in groups, and in the field follow a similar mass distribution. (2) Comparing both ICBS and EDisCS mass functions to mass functions in the…
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