Evolution of Galaxies and their Environments at z = 0.1 to 3 in COSMOS
N. Scoville, S. Arnouts, H. Aussel, A. Benson, A. Bongiorno, K. Bundy,, M. A. A. Calvo, P. Capak, M. Carollo, F. Civano, J. Dunlop, M. Elvis, A., Faisst, A. Finoguenov, Hai Fu, M. Giavalisco, Q. Guo, O. Ilbert, A. Iovino,, M. Kajisawa, J. Kartaltepe, A. Leauthaud, O. Le Fe`vre

TL;DR
This study maps large-scale structures up to redshift 3 in the COSMOS field, revealing how galaxy properties and environmental densities evolve over cosmic time and comparing observations with theoretical predictions.
Contribution
It introduces detailed environmental density measurements using adaptive smoothing and Voronoi tessellation, and compares these with semi-analytic models, highlighting galaxy-environment correlations up to z=3.
Findings
Over 250 significant overdense structures identified up to z=3
Strong correlation between galaxy type and environment at z<1.2
Environmental influence on star formation rates varies with redshift
Abstract
Large-scale structures (LSS) out to z are measured in the Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS) using extremely accurate photometric redshifts (photoz). The Ks-band selected sample (from Ultra-Vista) is comprised of 155,954 galaxies. Two techniques -- adaptive smoothing and Voronoi tessellation -- are used to estimate the environmental densities within 127 redshift slices. Approximately 250 statistically significant overdense structures are identified out to z with shapes varying from elongated filamentary structures to more circularly symmetric concentrations. We also compare the densities derived for COSMOS with those based on semi-analytic predictions for a CDM simulation and find excellent overall agreement between the mean densities as a function of redshift and the range of densities. The galaxy properties (stellar mass, spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and…
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