Galaxy sizes as a function of environment at intermediate redshift from the ESO Distant Cluster Survey
Kshitija Kelkar, Alfonso Arag\'on-Salamanca, Meghan E. Gray, David, Maltby, Benedetta Vulcani, Gabriella De Lucia, Bianca M. Poggianti, Dennis, Zaritsky

TL;DR
This study compares galaxy sizes in clusters and fields at intermediate redshift (0.4<z<0.8) and finds no significant environmental effect on size, suggesting size evolution mechanisms are environment-independent at these epochs.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of galaxy size distributions in cluster and field environments at intermediate redshift, showing environment has little impact on galaxy sizes.
Findings
No significant size difference between cluster and field galaxies.
Size differences are less than 10-20%.
Results are consistent across photometric and spectroscopic samples.
Abstract
In order to assess whether the environment has a significant effect on galaxy sizes, we compare the mass--size relations of cluster and field galaxies in the redshift range from the ESO Distant Cluster Survey (EDisCS) using HST images. We analyse two mass-selected samples, one defined using photometric redshifts (), and a smaller more robust subsample using spectroscopic redshifts (). We find no significant difference in the size distributions of cluster and field galaxies of a given morphology. Similarly, we find no significant difference in the size distributions of cluster and field galaxies of similar rest-frame colours. We rule out average size differences larger than --\% in both cases. Consistent conclusions are found with the spectroscopic and photometric samples.…
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