UV to FIR catalogue of a galaxy sample in nearby clusters: SEDs and environmental trends
Jonathan D. Hernandez-Fernandez, J. Iglesias-Paramo, J. M. Vilchez

TL;DR
This study compiles UV to FIR spectral energy distributions of galaxies in nearby clusters to analyze environmental effects on star formation, revealing differences in galaxy distributions based on mass and activity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive SED catalog for cluster galaxies and investigates environmental trends affecting galaxy properties and distributions.
Findings
Virial and outskirts regions share high-density galaxy distributions.
Massive clusters have distinct density distributions compared to low-mass clusters.
Low-luminosity star-forming galaxies are more spread out than passive ones.
Abstract
In this paper, we present a sample of cluster galaxies devoted to study the environmental influence on the star-formation activity. This sample of galaxies inhabits in clusters showing a rich variety in their characteristics and have been observed by the SDSS-DR6 down to M_B ~ -18 and by the GALEX AIS throughout sky regions corresponding to several megaparsecs. We assign the broad-band and emission-line fluxes from ultraviolet to far-infrared to each galaxy performing an accurate spectral energy distribution for spectral fitting analysis. The clusters follow the general X-ray luminosity vs. velocity dispersion trend of L_X/sigma_c^4.4. The analysis of the distributions of galaxy density counting up to the 5th nearest neighbor Sigma_5 shows: (1) the virial regions and the cluster outskirts share a common range in the high density part of the distribution. This can be attributed to the…
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