Deficit of Luminous and Normal Red Galaxies in Cosmic Voids
Sean Bruton, Xinyu Dai, Eduardo Guerras, Ferah A. Munshi

TL;DR
This study reveals a significant deficit of luminous and normal red galaxies in cosmic voids compared to walls, highlighting environmental effects on galaxy evolution and merger history.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale statistical analysis of red and blue galaxy distributions in voids using combined survey data and semi-analytic models.
Findings
Red-to-blue galaxy ratio increases with distance from void centers.
Void galaxies are bluer on average than wall galaxies.
Semi-analytic models reproduce the observed color differences.
Abstract
We construct a sample of 10,680 wall galaxies and 3,064 void galaxies with by cross referencing a void catalog from literature with Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) CMASS and WiggleZ galaxies, where the CMASS survey targets redder galaxies and the WiggleZ survey targets bluer galaxies. Comparing the density profiles of the red and blue galaxies as a function of the void radius, we find that the number ratio of red-to-blue galaxies increases with distances from the void centers, suggesting a deficit of luminous and normal red galaxies in voids. We find a mean (g -- r) magnitude color of 1.298 and 1.210 for the wall and void galaxies, respectively, when considering the combined red and blue sample, which is found to be a significant difference. However, when considering the blue and red samples separately, we find no significant color difference. We…
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