On the orbital and internal evolution of cluster galaxies
Francesca Iannuzzi, Klaus Dolag

TL;DR
This study investigates how the orbital dynamics of cluster galaxies influence their internal evolution, revealing that infall orbital properties significantly shape their subsequent development and that anisotropy increases over time.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the link between orbital motion at infall and internal galaxy evolution using semi-analytic models and simulations.
Findings
Orbital properties at infall strongly influence galaxy evolution.
Overall anisotropy of galaxy populations increases with time.
Internal properties are more related to infall conditions than to current orbital states.
Abstract
Galaxies inhabiting a cluster environment experience significant evolution in their orbital motions throughout time; this is accompanied by changes in the anisotropy parameter, measuring the relative importance of radial and tangential motions for a given class of objects. Along with orbital changes, galaxies in clusters are well known to undergo severe alteration in their hot/cold gas content and star formation properties. Understanding the link between the changes in the internal properties of galaxies and their orbital motion is of crucial importance in the study of galaxy evolution, as it could unveil the primary mechanism responsible for its environmental dependence. Do the changes in the internal properties happen in parallel with those in the orbital motion? Or are the orbital features at the time of infall what determines the fate of the member galaxies? Alternatively: are the…
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