A Kinematic Approach To Assessing Environmental Effects: Star-Forming Galaxies in a z~0.9 SpARCS cluster using Spitzer 24um Observations
A. G. Noble (1), T. M. A. Webb (1), A. Muzzin (2), G. Wilson (3), H., K. C. Yee (4), R. F. J. van der Burg (2) ((1) McGill University, (2) Leiden, University, (3) UC Riverside, (4) University of Toronto)

TL;DR
This study uses infrared observations and kinematic analysis to explore star-forming galaxies in a z~0.9 cluster, revealing complex dynamical histories and environmental effects on star formation.
Contribution
It introduces a kinematic approach to distinguish galaxy accretion histories and environmental impacts on star formation in a high-redshift cluster.
Findings
Infalling galaxies show minimal environmental star formation dependence.
A double sequence of star-forming galaxies indicates diverse dynamical histories.
Accretion history proxies reveal lower specific SFRs in earlier-accreted galaxies.
Abstract
We present an infrared study of a z=0.872 cluster, SpARCS J161314+564930, with the primary aim of distinguishing the dynamical histories of spectroscopically confirmed star-forming members to assess the role of cluster environment. We utilize deep MIPS imaging and a mass-limited sample of 85 spectroscopic members to identify 16 24um-bright sources within the cluster, and measure their 24um star formation rates (SFRs) down to ~6 Msolar/year. Based on their line-of-sight velocities and stellar ages, MIPS cluster members appear to be an infalling population that was recently accreted from the field with minimal environmental dependency on their star formation. However, we identify a double-sequenced distribution of star-forming galaxies amongst the members, with one branch exhibiting declining specific SFRs with mass. The members along this sub-main sequence contain spectral features…
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