The Galaxy Stellar Mass Function of X-ray detected groups: environmental dependence of galaxy evolution in the COSMOS survey
S. Giodini (1), A. Finoguenov (2), D.Pierini, G. Zamorani (3), O., Ilbert (4), S. Lilly (5), Y. Peng (5), N. Scoville (6), M. Tanaka (7) ((1), Leiden Observatory, Leiden, Netherlands, (2) MPE, Garching, Germany, (3), INAF-OAB, Bologna, Italy, (4) LAM, Marseille, France, (5) ETH

TL;DR
This study investigates how environment influences galaxy stellar mass distribution and star formation activity in X-ray detected groups compared to the field, revealing environmental effects on galaxy evolution up to redshift 1.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of stellar mass functions and star formation rates in galaxy groups of different masses and the field, highlighting environmental impacts on galaxy evolution.
Findings
Passive galaxy build-up is environment-dependent, diminishing in higher mass groups.
Star forming galaxy distribution remains similar across environments, well-described by a Schechter function.
Low mass groups have a higher fraction of stellar mass in star forming galaxies.
Abstract
We study the stellar mass distribution for galaxies in 160 X-ray detected groups of 10^13<Log(M_200/M_sun)<2x10^14 and compare it with that of galaxies in the field, to investigate the action of environment on the build up of the stellar mass. We highlight differences in the build up of the passive population in the field, which imprint features in the distribution of stellar mass of passive galaxies at Log(M/M_sun)< 10.5. The gradual diminishing of the effect when moving to groups of increasing total masses indicates that the growing influence of the environment in bound structures is responsible for the build up of a quenched component at Log(M/M_sun)< 10.5. Differently, the stellar mass distribution of star forming galaxies is similar in shape in all the environments, and can be described by a single Schechter function both in groups and in the field. Little evolution is seen up to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
