The cosmic environment overtakes the local density in shaping galaxy star formation
Jian Ren, Zhizheng Pan, XianZhong Zheng, Jianbo Qin, DongDong Shi,, Valentino Gonzalez, Fuyan Bian, Jia-Sheng Huang, Min Fang, Wenhao Liu, Run, Wen, Yuheng Zhang, Man Qiao, Shuang Liu

TL;DR
This study investigates how large-scale cosmic structures influence galaxy star formation, finding that the cosmic environment can dominate local density effects, allowing star formation to persist regardless of local conditions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the large-scale cosmic environment can override local density effects, maintaining star formation levels in galaxies similar to those in the field.
Findings
Star-forming galaxies in the LSS have similar star formation rates as field galaxies.
Star formation depends more on stellar mass than local density in the LSS.
The cosmic environment can suppress local density effects on galaxy star formation.
Abstract
The gas supply from the cosmic web is the key to sustain star formation in galaxies. It remains to be explored how the cosmic large-scale structure (LSS) effects on galaxy evolution at given local environments. We examine galaxy specific star formation rate as a function of local density in a LSS at in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South. The LSS is mapped by 732 galaxies with \,mag and redshift at collected from the literature and our spectroscopic observations with Magellan/IMACS, consisting of five galaxy clusters/groups and surrounding filaments over an area of \,co-moving\,Mpc. The spread of spectroscopic redshifts corresponds a velocity dispersion of 494\,km\,s, indicating the LSS likely to be a thin sheet with a galaxy density times that of the general field. These clusters/groups in this LSS mostly…
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