Galaxy evolution in the metric of the Cosmic Web
K. Kraljic, S. Arnouts, C. Pichon, C. Laigle, S. de la Torre, D., Vibert, C. Cadiou, Y. Dubois, M. Treyer, C. Schimd, S. Codis, V. de, Lapparent, J. Devriendt, H.S. Hwang, D. Le Borgne, N. Malavasi, B. Milliard,, M. Musso, D. Pogosyan, M. Alpaslan, J. Bland-Hawthorn, A. H. Wright

TL;DR
This study investigates how the cosmic web influences galaxy properties, revealing that galaxy mass, color, and star formation rates vary with proximity to web features, supported by observational data and simulations.
Contribution
It demonstrates the impact of large-scale anisotropic tides on galaxy evolution, extending excursion theory to include filamentary influences.
Findings
Galaxies closer to filaments and walls are more massive and passive.
Red fraction of galaxies increases near nodes and filaments.
Hydrodynamical simulations support observational trends.
Abstract
The role of the cosmic web in shaping galaxy properties is investigated in the GAMA spectroscopic survey in the redshift range . The stellar mass, dust corrected colour and specific star formation rate (sSFR) of galaxies are analysed as a function of their distances to the 3D cosmic web features, such as nodes, filaments and walls, as reconstructed by DisPerSE. Significant mass and type/colour gradients are found for the whole population, with more massive and/or passive galaxies being located closer to the filament and wall than their less massive and/or star-forming counterparts. Mass segregation persists among the star-forming population alone. The red fraction of galaxies increases when closing in on nodes, and on filaments regardless of the distance to nodes. Similarly, the star-forming population reddens (or lowers its sSFR) at fixed mass when…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
