A journey from the outskirts to the cores of groups I: Color- and mass-segregation in 20K-zCOSMOS groups
V. Presotto, A. Iovino, M. Scodeggio, O. Cucciati, C. Knobel, M., Bolzonella, P. Oesch, A. Finoguenov, M. Tanaka, K. Kova\v{c}, Y. Peng, G., Zamorani, S. Bardelli, L. Pozzetti, P. Kampczyk, C. L\'opez-Sanjuan, D., Vergani, E. Zucca, L. A. M. Tasca, C. M. Carollo, T. Contini

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy properties like color and mass vary with distance from the center in galaxy groups at intermediate to high redshifts, revealing different segregation patterns linked to group richness and physical processes.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the dependence of color and mass segregation on group richness and redshift, highlighting different physical mechanisms driving these effects.
Findings
Massive galaxies show no strong radial dependence in red/blue fractions.
Lower-mass galaxies exhibit radial color dependence in poor groups.
Mass segregation occurs only in rich groups, not poor ones.
Abstract
Using the group catalog obtained from zCOSMOS spectroscopic data and the complementary photometric data from the COSMOS survey, we explore segregation effects occurring in groups of galaxies at intermediate/high redshifts. We built two composite groups at intermediate (0.2 <= z <= 0.45) and high (0.45 < z <= 0.8) redshifts, and we divided the corresponding composite group galaxies into three samples according to their distance from the group center. We explored how galaxy stellar masses and colors - working in narrow bins of stellar masses - vary as a function of the galaxy distance from the group center. We found that the most massive galaxies in our sample (Log(M_gal/M_sun) >= 10.6) do not display any strong group-centric dependence of the fractions of red/blue objects. For galaxies of lower masses (9.8 <= Log(M_gal/M_sun) <= 10.6) there is a radial dependence in the changing mix of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
