The lack of star formation gradients in galaxy groups up to z~1.6
Felicia Ziparo, Paola Popesso, Andrea Biviano, Alexis Finoguenov,, Stijn Wuyts, Dave Wilman, Mara Salvato, Masayuki Tanaka, Olivier Ilbert,, Kirpal Nandra, Dieter Lutz, David Elbaz, Mark Dickinson, Bruno Altieri,, Herve' Aussel, Stefano Berta, Andrea Cimatti, Dario Fadda

TL;DR
This study investigates star formation activity in galaxy groups up to redshift 1.6, finding no significant dependence on distance from the group center, challenging some expectations about environmental effects on galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of star formation rates in galaxy groups up to z~1.6 using spectroscopic data and multi-wavelength observations, revealing no correlation with group-centric distance.
Findings
No correlation between SFR and distance from group center at any redshift.
No strong mass segregation observed in galaxy groups.
Results imply longer relaxation times in groups compared to clusters.
Abstract
In the local Universe, galaxy properties show a strong dependence on environment. In cluster cores, early type galaxies dominate, whereas star-forming galaxies are more and more common in the outskirts. At higher redshifts and in somewhat less dense environments (e.g. galaxy groups), the situation is less clear. One open issue is that of whether and how the star formation rate (SFR) of galaxies in groups depends on the distance from the centre of mass. To shed light on this topic, we have built a sample of X-ray selected galaxy groups at 0<z<1.6 in various blank fields (ECDFS, COSMOS, GOODS). We use a sample of spectroscopically confirmed group members with stellar mass M >10^10.3 M_sun in order to have a high spectroscopic completeness. As we use only spectroscopic redshifts, our results are not affected by uncertainties due to projection effects. We use several SFR indicators to link…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
