Non-linearity and environmental dependence of the star forming galaxies Main Sequence
G. Erfanianfar, P. Popesso, A. Finoguenov, D. Wilman, S. Wuyts, A., Biviano, M. Salvato, M. Mirkazemi, L. Morselli, F. Ziparo, K. Nandra, D., Lutz, D. Elbaz, M. Dickinson, M. Tanaka, M. B. Altieri, H. Aussel, F. Bauer,, S. Berta, R. M. Bielby, N. Brandt, N. Cappelluti

TL;DR
This study investigates how the star formation rate versus stellar mass relation, known as the Main Sequence, varies with galaxy environment and mass, revealing non-linearity and environmental influences on galaxy evolution up to redshift 1.1.
Contribution
It demonstrates the non-linear nature of the Main Sequence and the combined effects of morphology and environment on star formation activity across cosmic time.
Findings
Main Sequence flattens at high stellar masses.
Group galaxies deviate from the MS at low redshift.
Bulge-dominated galaxies contribute to quenching at high masses.
Abstract
Using data from four deep fields (COSMOS, AEGIS, ECDFS, and CDFN), we study the correlation between the position of galaxies in the star formation rate (SFR) versus stellar mass plane and local environment at . To accurately estimate the galaxy SFR, we use the deepest available Spitzer/MIPS 24 and Herschel/PACS datasets. We distinguish group environments ( 10) based on the available deep X-ray data and lower halo mass environments based on the local galaxy density. We confirm that the Main Sequence (MS) of star forming galaxies is not a linear relation and there is a flattening towards higher stellar masses ( ), across all environments. At high redshift ( ), the MS varies little with environment. At low redshift ( ), group galaxies tend to deviate from the mean MS towards the region of…
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