Brightest Group Galaxies: Stellar Mass and Star Formation Rate (paper I)
Ghassem Gozaliasl, Alexis Finoguenov, Habib G. Khosroshahi, Mohammad, Mirkazemi, Ghazaleh Erfanianfar, Masayuki Tanaka

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of stellar mass and star formation rates in brightest group galaxies across redshifts 0.04 to 1.3, revealing growth patterns, star-forming activity, and deviations from model predictions.
Contribution
It provides new observational insights into BGG stellar mass distribution evolution and star formation activity, contrasting with semi-analytic model predictions.
Findings
Stellar mass distribution evolves towards normal but skews to low masses.
Mean stellar mass of BGGs doubles from z=1.3 to z=0.1.
Low mass BGGs in low mass halos are more star-forming.
Abstract
We study the distribution and evolution of the stellar mass and the star formation rate (SFR) of the brightest group galaxies (BGGs) over using a large sample of X-ray galaxy groups selected from the COSMOS, AEGIS, and XMM-LSS fields. We compare our results with predictions from the semi-analytic models based on the Millennium simulation. In contrast to model predictions, we find that, as the universe evolves, the stellar mass distribution evolves towards a normal distribution. This distribution tends to skew to low mass BGGs at all redshifts implying the presence of a star-forming population of the BGGs with which results in the shape of the stellar mass distribution deviating from a normal distribution. In agreement with models and previous studies, we find that the mean stellar mass of BGGs grows with time by a factor of …
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