The stellar mass function of galaxies in Planck-selected clusters at 0.5 < z < 0.7: new constraints on the timescale and location of satellite quenching
Remco F. J. van der Burg, Sean McGee, Herve Aussel, Hakon Dahle,, Monique Arnaud, Gabriel W. Pratt, Adam Muzzin

TL;DR
This study investigates the galaxy stellar mass function in clusters at 0.5<z<0.7, revealing environmental effects on galaxy quenching, with implications for the timescale and location of satellite galaxy quenching mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the quenching timescale and location within galaxy clusters by analyzing the stellar mass function and environmental quenching efficiency.
Findings
SMF of star-forming galaxies is environment-independent.
Steeper low-mass slope of quiescent galaxy SMF in clusters.
Quenching efficiency increases towards cluster centers.
Abstract
We study the abundance of star-forming and quiescent galaxies in a sample of 21 massive clusters at 0.5<z<0.7, detected with the Planck satellite. We measure the cluster galaxy stellar mass function (SMF), which is a fundamental observable to study and constrain the formation and evolution of galaxies. Our measurements are based on homogeneous and deep multi-band photometry spanning u- to the Ks-band for each cluster and are supported by spectroscopic data from different programs. The galaxy population is separated between quiescent and star-forming galaxies based on their rest-frame U-V and V-J colours. The SMF is compared to that of field galaxies at the same redshifts, using data from the COSMOS/UltraVISTA survey. We find that the shape of the SMF of star-forming galaxies does not depend on environment, while the SMF of quiescent galaxies has a significantly steeper low-mass slope in…
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