Galaxy kinematics in the XMMU J2235-2557 cluster field at z~1.4
J. M. P\'erez-Mart\'inez (1), B. Ziegler (1), M. Verdugo (1), A., B\"ohm (2), M. Tanaka (3) ((1) Department of Astrophysics, University of, Vienna, (2) Institute for Astro-, Particle Physics, University of, Innsbruck, (3) National Astronomical Observatory of Japan)

TL;DR
This study investigates the kinematic properties of galaxies in a z~1.4 cluster, revealing that low-mass cluster galaxies are significantly overluminous, likely due to star formation triggered by environmental interactions.
Contribution
First spatially resolved kinematic analysis of cluster galaxies at z~1.4, comparing their properties to local relations and exploring environmental effects on galaxy evolution.
Findings
Cluster galaxies are 1.6 mags brighter than local counterparts.
Low-mass cluster galaxies are up to 2.4 mags overluminous.
High-mass galaxies show mild evolution consistent with stellar population aging.
Abstract
We took spatially resolved slit FORS2 spectra of 19 cluster galaxies at z=1.4, and 8 additional field galaxies at 1<z<1.2 using the ESO Very Large Telescope. The targets were selected from previous spectroscopic and photometric campaigns. Our spectroscopy was complemented with HST-ACS imaging in the F775W and F850LP filters, which is mandatory to derive the galaxy structural parameters accurately. We analyzed the ionized gas kinematics by extracting rotation curves from the two-dimensional spectra. Taking into account all geometrical, observational, and instrumental effects, we used these rotation curves to derive the intrinsic maximum rotation velocity (Vmax). Vmax was robustly determined for 6 cluster galaxies and 3 field galaxies. Galaxies with sky contamination or insufficient spatial rotation curve extent were not included in our analysis. We compared our sample to the local B-band…
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