Probing galaxy evolution in massive clusters using ACT and DES: splashback as a cosmic clock
Susmita Adhikari, Tae-hyeon Shin, Bhuvnesh Jain, Matt Hilton, Eric, Baxter, Chihway Chang, Risa H. Wechsler, Nick Battaglia, J. Richard Bond,, Sebastian Bocquet, Joseph DeRose, Steve K. Choi, Mark Devlin, Jo Dunkley,, August E. Evrard, Simone Ferraro, J. Colin Hill

TL;DR
This study uses galaxy profiles in massive clusters from ACT and DES to explore the splashback feature as a cosmic clock, revealing galaxy infall times and quenching processes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method linking splashback features to galaxy infall times and quenching, providing insights into galaxy evolution in clusters.
Findings
Splashback radius at ~2.4 Mpc/h matches simulations.
Red and green valley galaxies show expected splashback features.
Blue galaxies have weaker, smaller-radius splashback features.
Abstract
We measure the projected number density profiles of galaxies and the splashback feature in clusters selected by the Sunyaev--Zeldovich (SZ) effect from the Advanced Atacama Cosmology Telescope (AdvACT) survey using galaxies observed by the Dark Energy Survey (DES). The splashback radius for the complete galaxy sample is consistent with theoretical measurements from CDM-only simulations, and is located at Mpc . We split the sample based on galaxy color and find significant differences in the profile shapes. Red galaxies and those in the green valley show a splashback-like minimum in their slope profile consistent with theoretical predictions, while the bluest galaxies show a weak feature that appears at a smaller radius. We develop a mapping of galaxies to subhalos in -body simulations by splitting subhalos based on infall time onto the cluster halos. We…
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