Galaxy Zoo: The Environmental Dependence of Bars and Bulges in Disc Galaxies
Ramin A. Skibba, Karen L. Masters, Robert C. Nichol, Idit Zehavi, Ben, Hoyle, Edward M. Edmondson, Steven P. Bamford, Carolin N. Cardamone, William, C. Keel, Chris Lintott, Kevin Schawinski

TL;DR
This study investigates how the environment influences the presence of bars and bulges in disc galaxies, revealing significant correlations that are partly independent of galaxy color and mass, with implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new evidence of environmental effects on barred and bulge-dominated galaxies, using a large SDSS sample and galaxy clustering analysis to disentangle these influences.
Findings
Environmental correlations of barred and bulge-dominated galaxies are significant.
Approximately 50% of the bar-environment correlation is explained by halo mass.
Barred galaxies tend to reside in slightly higher-mass haloes and some are satellite galaxies.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the environmental dependence of bars and bulges in disc galaxies, using a volume-limited catalogue of 15810 galaxies at z<0.06 from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey with visual morphologies from the Galaxy Zoo 2 project. We find that the likelihood of having a bar, or bulge, in disc galaxies increases when the galaxies have redder (optical) colours and larger stellar masses, and observe a transition in the bar and bulge likelihoods, such that massive disc galaxies are more likely to host bars and bulges. We use galaxy clustering methods to demonstrate statistically significant environmental correlations of barred, and bulge-dominated, galaxies, from projected separations of 150 kpc/h to 3 Mpc/h. These environmental correlations appear to be independent of each other: i.e., bulge-dominated disc galaxies exhibit a significant bar-environment correlation, and barred…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
