The Effects of Environment on the Evolution of the Galaxy Stellar Mass Function
Casey Papovich (1), Lalitwadee Kawinwanichakij (1), Ryan Quadri (1),, Karl Glazebrook (2), Ivo Labbe (2, 3), Kim-Vy Tran (4, 1), Ben Forrest, (1), Glenn G. Kacprzak (2), Lee R. Spitler (5, 6), Caroline S. Straatman, (7), Adam Tomczak (8) ((1) Texas A, M University

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy environment influences the evolution of the stellar-mass function from redshift 0.2 to 2.0, revealing that quenching processes and environmental effects vary over cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental dependence of galaxy quenching and the evolution of the stellar-mass function across different redshifts and densities.
Findings
Quiescent galaxy SMF shows no evolution in low-density environments over time.
Higher-density environments exhibit a rapid increase in low-mass quiescent galaxies at lower redshifts.
Environmental quenching efficiency decreases with redshift, affecting galaxy evolution models.
Abstract
We study the effects of galaxy environment on the evolution of the stellar-mass function (SMF) over 0.2 < z < 2.0 using the FourStar Galaxy Evolution (ZFOURGE) survey and NEWFIRM Medium-Band Survey (NMBS) down to the stellar-mass completeness limit, log M / Msun > 9.0 (9.5) at z = 1.0 (2.0). We compare the SMFs for quiescent and star-forming galaxies in the highest and lowest environments using a density estimator based on the distance to the galaxies' third-nearest neighbors. For star-forming galaxies, at all redshifts there are only minor differences with environment in the shape of the SMF. For quiescent galaxies, the SMF in the lowest densities shows no evolution with redshift, other than an overall increase in number density (phi*) with time. This suggests that the stellar-mass dependence of quenching in relatively isolated galaxies is both universal and does not evolve strongly.…
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