Emission Line Galaxies and Active Galactic Nuclei in WINGS clusters
P. Marziani, M. D'Onofrio, D. Bettoni, B. M. Poggianti, A. Moretti, G., Fasano, J. Fritz, A. Cava, J. Varela, A. Omizzolo

TL;DR
This study analyzes emission line galaxies in 46 low-redshift galaxy clusters from the WINGS survey, revealing a lower frequency and weaker emission lines compared to control samples, with environmental effects influencing galaxy activity and gas excitation mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a detailed classification and analysis of emission line galaxies in clusters, highlighting environmental impacts on galaxy properties and identifying a significant population of transition objects and LINERs.
Findings
Lower frequency of emission line galaxies in clusters.
Weaker emission lines indicating less ionized gas and star formation.
Presence of transition objects and LINERs, mostly 'retired' galaxies.
Abstract
We present the analysis of the emission line galaxies members of 46 low redshift (0.04 < z < 0.07) clusters observed by WINGS (WIde-field Nearby Galaxy cluster Survey, Fasano et al. 2006). Emission line galaxies were identified following criteria that are meant to minimize biases against non-star forming galaxies and classified employing diagnostic diagrams. We have examined the emission line properties and frequencies of star forming galaxies, transition objects and active galactic nuclei (AGNs: LINERs and Seyferts), unclassified galaxies with emission lines, and quiescent galaxies with no detectable line emission. A deficit of emission line galaxies in the cluster environment is indicated by both a lower frequency with respect to control samples, and by a systematically lower Balmer emission line equivalent width and luminosity (up to one order of magnitude in equivalent width with…
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