Morphological evolution of cluster red sequence galaxies in the past 9 Gyr
Roberto De Propris (Finnish Centre for Astronomy with ESO, University, of Turku), Malcolm Bremer (University of Bristol, UK), Steve Phillipps, (University of Bristol, UK)

TL;DR
This study investigates the morphological evolution of cluster red sequence galaxies over the past 9 billion years, revealing significant changes in disk-like structures and color gradients primarily before redshift 0.5, with minimal evolution afterward.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of morphological changes in cluster red sequence galaxies from redshift 1.4 to 0.2, highlighting the fading and thickening of disks and the stabilization of bulge properties.
Findings
Disappearance of disk-like systems with Sersic n<2 below z~0.5.
Decrease in axial ratio range, removing elongated thin disks.
Reduction of radial color gradients over time.
Abstract
Galaxies arrive on the red sequences of clusters at high redshift () once their star formation is quenched and evolve passively thereafter. However, we have previously found that cluster red sequence galaxies (CRSGs) undergo significant morphological evolution subsequent to the cessation of star formation, at some point in the past 9-10~Gyr. Through a detailed study of a large sample of cluster red sequence galaxies spanning we elucidate the details of this evolution. Below (in the last 5-6 Gyr) there is little or no morphological evolution in the population as a whole, unlike in the previous 4-5 Gyrs. Over this earlier time (i) disk-like systems with S{\'e}rsic progressively disappear, as (ii) the range of their axial ratios similarly decreases, removing the most elongated systems (those consistent with thin disks seen at an appreciable…
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