Groups of two galaxies in SDSS: implications of colours on star formation quenching time-scales
Christopher Q. Trinh, Elizabeth J. Barton, James S. Bullock, Michael, C. Cooper, Andrew R. Zentner, Risa H. Wechsler

TL;DR
This study investigates how very sparse galaxy groups, specifically pairs, influence galaxy colour and star formation quenching timescales, revealing that environment impacts galaxy evolution even in minimal group settings.
Contribution
It introduces a method to select isolated and paired galaxies in SDSS and demonstrates that sparse groups significantly affect galaxy colour and star formation quenching timescales.
Findings
Red excess in satellite galaxies indicates delayed-then-rapid quenching.
Central galaxies show a slight blue excess compared to isolated galaxies.
Sparse groups influence galaxy evolution despite wide separations.
Abstract
We have devised a method to select galaxies that are isolated in their dark matter halo (N=1 systems) and galaxies that reside in a group of exactly two (N=2 systems). Our N=2 systems are widely-separated (up to \,200\,\,kpc), where close galaxy-galaxy interactions are not dominant. We apply our selection criteria to two volume-limited samples of galaxies from SDSS DR6 with -19 and -20 to study the effects of the environment of very sparse groups on galaxy colour. For satellite galaxies in a group of two, we find a red excess attributed to star formation quenching of 0.15\,\,0.01 and 0.14\,\,0.01 for the -19 and -20 samples, respectively, relative to isolated galaxies of the same stellar mass. Assuming N=1 systems are the progenitors of N=2 systems, an immediate-rapid star formation quenching scenario is inconsistent with these…
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