NUV signatures of environment driven galaxy quenching in SDSS groups
Jacob P. Crossett, Kevin A. Pimbblet, D. Heath Jones, Michael J. I., Brown, John P. Stott

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy environments influence residual star formation, revealing that non-grouped galaxies tend to have more blue NUV-r colors and slower star formation decline compared to satellite galaxies in groups.
Contribution
It provides new evidence that galaxy quenching is environment-dependent, with non-grouped galaxies experiencing slower star formation decay than those in groups.
Findings
Non-grouped galaxies show a higher fraction of blue NUV-r colors.
Satellite galaxies have a lower NUV fraction, indicating faster quenching.
Slow star formation decline explains the blue colors of non-grouped galaxies.
Abstract
We have investigated the effect of group environment on residual star formation in galaxies, using Galex NUV galaxy photometry with the SDSS group catalogue of Yang et al. (2007). We compared the (NUV ) colours of grouped and non-grouped galaxies, and find a significant increase in the fraction of red sequence galaxies with blue (NUV ) colours outside of groups. When comparing galaxies in mass matched samples of satellite (non-central), and non-grouped galaxies, we found a > 4{\sigma} difference in the distribution of (NUV ) colours, and an (NUV ) blue fraction higher outside groups. A comparison of satellite and non-grouped samples has found the NUV fraction is a factor of lower for satellite galaxies between and , showing that higher mass galaxies are more able to form stars when not influenced by…
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