The Relation Between Galaxy Morphology and Environment in the Local Universe: An RC3-SDSS Picture
David J.Wilman (1), Peter Erwin (1,2) ((1) Max-Planck-Insitut fuer, extraterrestrische Physik, Giessenbachstrasse, Germany, (2), Universitaets-Sternwarte Muenchen, Muenchen, Germany)

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy morphology, especially the fractions of spirals, S0s, and ellipticals, varies with environment and halo mass at z ~ 0, revealing different formation channels for galaxy types.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of morphology-environment relations using RC3 and SDSS data, highlighting differences between central and satellite galaxies and their formation processes.
Findings
Elliptical fraction strongly depends on halo mass for central galaxies.
S0 galaxy fraction increases with halo mass, especially for satellites.
Radio source frequency increases with halo mass in high-mass central galaxies.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the z ~ 0 morphology-environment relation for 911 bright (M_B < -19) galaxies, matching classical RC3 morphologies to the SDSS-based group catalog of Yang et al. We study how the relative fractions of spirals, lenticulars, and ellipticals depend on halo mass over a range of 10^11.7-10^14.8 h^-1 Msol. We pay particular attention to how morphology relates to central (most massive) vs satellite galaxy status. The fraction of galaxies which are elliptical is a strong function of stellar mass; it is also a strong function of halo mass, but only for central galaxies. We interpret this in a scenario where elliptical galaxies are formed, probably via mergers, as central galaxies within their halos; satellite ellipticals are previously central galaxies accreted onto larger halos. The overall fraction of S0 galaxies increases strongly with halo mass, from ~10% to ~70%.…
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