Galaxies in X-ray Groups. III. Satellite Color and Morphology Transformations
Matthew R. George, Chung-Pei Ma, Kevin Bundy, Alexie Leauthaud, Jeremy, Tinker, Risa H. Wechsler, Alexis Finoguenov, Benedetta Vulcani

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy colors and morphologies change with environment in X-ray galaxy groups, revealing that dense environments influence galaxy evolution through processes like mergers and tidal interactions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into environmental effects on galaxy morphology and color evolution in galaxy groups at intermediate redshifts, emphasizing the role of mergers and tidal encounters.
Findings
Satellite galaxies near group centers are more quenched and less disk-dominated.
Color and morphology depend on a galaxy's position within the group halo.
Mergers and tidal interactions are likely key processes in galaxy transformation.
Abstract
While the star formation rates and morphologies of galaxies have long been known to correlate with their local environment, the process by which these correlations are generated is not well understood. Galaxy groups are thought to play an important role in shaping the physical properties of galaxies before entering massive clusters at low redshift, and transformations of satellite galaxies likely dominate the buildup of local environmental correlations. To illuminate the physical processes that shape galaxy evolution in dense environments, we study a sample of 116 X-ray selected galaxy groups at z=0.2-1 with halo masses of 10^13-10^14 M_sun and centroids determined with weak lensing. We analyze morphologies based on HST imaging and colors determined from 31 photometric bands for a stellar mass-limited population of 923 satellite galaxies and a comparison sample of 16644 field galaxies.…
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