LoCuSS: The steady decline and slow quenching of star formation in cluster galaxies over the last four billion years
C. P. Haines, M. J. Pereira, G. P. Smith, E. Egami, A. J. R., Sanderson, A. Babul, A. Finoguenov, P. Merluzzi, G. Busarello, T. D. Rawle.,, N. Okabe

TL;DR
This study shows that star formation in massive cluster galaxies has been steadily declining over the last four billion years, with most galaxies experiencing slow quenching after being accreted into clusters, driven by environmental effects.
Contribution
It provides new evidence that star formation in cluster galaxies declines exponentially with a characteristic timescale of 0.7-2.0 Gyr, and quantifies the evolution of the Butcher-Oemler effect over redshift.
Findings
Star formation rates in cluster galaxies are 28% lower than in the field.
Star formation in cluster galaxies declines exponentially with a timescale of 0.7-2.0 Gyr.
The fraction of star-forming cluster galaxies increases rapidly with redshift, following (1+z)^7.6.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the levels and evolution of star formation activity in a representative sample of 30 massive galaxy clusters at 0.15<z<0.30 from the Local Cluster Substructure Survey (LoCuSS), combining wide-field Spitzer 24um data with extensive spectroscopy of cluster members. The specific-SFRs of massive (M>10^10 M_sun) star-forming cluster galaxies within r200 are found to be systematically 28% lower than their counterparts in the field at fixed stellar mass and redshift, a difference significant at the 8.7-sigma level. This is the unambiguous signature of star formation in most (and possibly all) massive star-forming galaxies being slowly quenched upon accretion into massive clusters, their SFRs declining exponentially on quenching time-scales in the range 0.7-2.0 Gyr. We measure the mid-infrared Butcher-Oemler effect over the redshift range 0.0-0.4, finding rapid…
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