K-CLASH: spatially-resolving star-forming galaxies in field and cluster environments at $z \approx 0.2$-$0.6$
Alfred L. Tiley (1,2,3), Sam P. Vaughan (4,5,3), John P. Stott (6),, Roger L. Davies (3), Laura J. Prichard (7), Andrew Bunker (3), Martin Bureau, (3,8), Michele Cappellari (3), Matt Jarvis (3,9), Aaron Robotham (1), Luca, Cortese (1,5), Sabine Bellstedt (1)

TL;DR
The K-CLASH survey investigates the spatially-resolved gas properties and kinematics of 191 star-forming galaxies at redshifts 0.2-0.6 in field and cluster environments to understand galaxy evolution and environmental effects.
Contribution
This study provides the first detailed spatially-resolved analysis of galaxies in this redshift range across different environments, bridging the gap between high and low redshift surveys.
Findings
Cluster galaxies have lower stellar masses than field galaxies at similar epochs.
No significant difference in star-formation rates between cluster and field galaxies after mass correction.
Cluster quenching appears rapid or recent, with little evidence of ongoing suppression.
Abstract
We present the KMOS-CLASH (K-CLASH) survey, a K-band Multi-Object Spectrograph (KMOS) survey of the spatially-resolved gas properties and kinematics of 191 (predominantly blue) H-detected galaxies at in field and cluster environments. K-CLASH targets galaxies in four Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH) fields in the KMOS -band, over radius (- Mpc) fields-of-view. K-CLASH aims to study the transition of star-forming galaxies from turbulent, highly star-forming disc-like and peculiar systems at -, to the comparatively quiescent, ordered late-type galaxies at , and to examine the role of clusters in the build-up of the red sequence since . In this paper, we describe the K-CLASH survey, present the sample, and provide an overview of the K-CLASH galaxy properties. We…
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