The miniJPAS survey: The role of group environment in quenching the star formation
R. M. Gonz\'alez Delgado, J. E. Rodr\'iguez-Mart\'in, L. A., D\'iaz-Garc\'ia, A. de Amorim, R. Garc\'ia-Benito, G. Mart\'inez-Solaeche, P., A. A. Lopes, M. Maturi, E. P\'erez, R. Cid Fernandes, A. Cortesi, A., Finoguenov, E. R. Carrasco, A. Hern\'an-Caballero, L. R. Abramo

TL;DR
This study demonstrates J-PAS's capability to detect low-mass galaxy groups and analyze their galaxy populations up to redshift 0.8, revealing how environment influences galaxy quenching and star formation decline.
Contribution
First application of miniJPAS data to characterize galaxy populations in low-mass groups and quantify environmental quenching effects up to z~0.8.
Findings
Red and quiescent galaxy fractions are higher in groups than in the field.
Quenched fraction excess in groups increases with stellar mass, exceeding 60% at high masses.
Star formation declines rapidly (<1.5 Gyr) in group environments.
Abstract
The miniJPAS survey has observed deg on the AEGIS field with 60 bands (spectral resolution of ) in order to demonstrate the capabilities of the Javalambre-Physics of the Accelerating Universe Astrophysical Survey (J-PAS) that will map deg of the northern sky in the next years. This paper shows the power of J-PAS to detect low mass groups and characterise their galaxy populations up to . We use the spectral energy distribution fitting code BaySeAGal to derive the stellar population properties of the galaxy members in 80 groups at previously detected by the AMICO code, as well as for a galaxy field sample retrieved from the whole miniJPAS sample. We identify blue, red, quiescent, and transition galaxy populations through their rest-frame (extinction corrected) colour, stellar mass () and specific star formation rate.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
