Environmental Effects on the Metal Enrichment of Low Mass Galaxies in Nearby Clusters
Vasiliki Petropoulou, Jose Manuel Vilchez, Jorge Iglesias-Paramo

TL;DR
This study investigates how the environment within galaxy clusters influences the chemical evolution of low-mass star-forming galaxies, revealing that dense environments can enhance metal enrichment through processes like ram-pressure stripping and gas reaccretion.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking cluster environment effects to the chemical evolution of low-mass galaxies, supported by SDSS spectra and hydrodynamic model comparisons.
Findings
Mass-metallicity relation varies with cluster environment.
Core galaxies in massive clusters show flattened metallicity slopes.
Ram-pressure stripping significantly reduces HI gas content in core galaxies.
Abstract
In this paper we study the chemical history of low-mass star-forming (SF) galaxies in the local Universe clusters Coma, A1367, A779, and A634. The aim of this work is to search for the imprint of the environment on the chemical evolution of these galaxies. Galaxy chemical evolution is linked to the star formation history (SFH), as well as to the gas interchange with the environment, and low-mass galaxies are well known to be vulnerable systems to environmental processes affecting both these parameters. For our study we have used spectra from the SDSS-III DR8. We have examined the mass-metallicity relation of cluster galaxies finding well defined sequences. The slope of these sequences, for galaxies in low-mass clusters and galaxies at large cluster-centric distances, follows the predictions of recent hydrodynamic models. A flattening of this slope has been observed for galaxies located…
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