Green Valley galaxies as a transition population in different environments
Valeria Coenda, H\'ector J. Mart\'inez, Hern\'an Muriel

TL;DR
This study compares properties of galaxies in different environments, revealing that denser environments more effectively quench star formation, with green valley galaxies showing intermediate features regardless of environment.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of green valley galaxies across multiple environments, highlighting environmental effects on galaxy evolution and quenching mechanisms.
Findings
Green valley galaxies constitute about 20% of galaxies in groups and clusters.
Quenching efficiency increases from field to dense environments.
Green valley galaxies have intermediate star formation histories.
Abstract
We present a comparative analysis of the properties of passive, star-forming and transition (green valley) galaxies, in four discrete environments: field, groups, the outskirts and the core of X-ray clusters. We construct samples of galaxies from the SDSS in these environments so that they are bound to have similar redshift distributions. The classification of galaxies into the three sequences is based on the UV-optical colour . We study a number of galaxy properties: stellar mass, morphology, specific star formation rate and the history of star formation. The analysis of green valley galaxies reveals that the physical mechanisms responsible for external quenching become more efficient moving from the field to denser environments. We confirm previous findings that green valley galaxies have intermediate morphologies, moreover, we find that this appears to be independent of the…
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