The regulation of star formation in cool-core clusters: imprints on the stellar populations of brightest cluster galaxies
S. I. Loubser, A. Babul, H. Hoekstra, A. Mahdavi, M. Donahue, C., Bildfell, G. M. Voit

TL;DR
This study investigates star formation in brightest cluster galaxies within cool-core clusters, revealing recent star formation linked to cluster core properties and supporting precipitation-driven models of star formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectral analysis of BCGs, identifying recent star formation and its correlation with cluster core conditions, advancing understanding of star formation regulation in galaxy clusters.
Findings
Young stellar populations detected in 4 out of 19 BCGs.
Recent star formation is associated with low entropy cluster cores.
Star formation correlates with low $t_{c}/t_{ff}$ ratios (<10).
Abstract
A fraction of brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) shows bright emission in the UV and the blue part of the optical spectrum, which has been interpreted as evidence of recent star formation. Most of these results are based on the analysis of broadband photometric data. Here, we study the optical spectra of a sample of 19 BCGs hosted by X-ray luminous galaxy clusters at 0.15 < z < 0.3, a subset from the Canadian Cluster Comparison Project (CCCP) sample. We identify plausible star formation histories of the galaxies by fitting Simple Stellar Populations (SSPs) as well as composite populations, consisting of a young stellar component superimposed on an intermediate/old stellar component, to accurately constrain their star formation histories. We detect prominent young (~200 Myr) stellar populations in 4 of the 19 galaxies. Of the four, the BCG in Abell 1835 shows remarkable A-type stellar…
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