A Gradual Decline of Star Formation since Cluster In-fall: New Kinematic Insights into Environmental Quenching at 0.3 $< z <$ 1.1
Keunho J. Kim, Matthew B. Bayliss, Allison G. Noble, Gourav Khullar,, Ethan Cronk, Joshua Roberson, Behzad Ansarinejad, Lindsey E. Bleem, Benjamin, Floyd, Sebastian Grandis, Guillaume Mahler, Michael A. McDonald, Christian L., Reichardt, Alexandro Saro, Keren Sharon

TL;DR
This study reveals that galaxies in clusters gradually stop forming stars over several billion years, with environmental effects like starvation playing a key role, based on kinematic in-fall proxies across a broad redshift range.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach using projected phase space to estimate galaxy in-fall times, providing new insights into the environmental quenching process over cosmic time.
Findings
Galaxies show a gradual increase in stellar age with in-fall time.
Environmental quenching occurs regardless of galaxy luminosity or redshift.
Starvation likely dominates as the slow quenching mechanism.
Abstract
The environments where galaxies reside crucially shape their star formation histories. We investigate a large sample of 1626 cluster galaxies located within 105 galaxy clusters spanning a large range in redshift (. The galaxy clusters are massive (MM), and are uniformly selected from the SPT and ACT Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) surveys. With spectra in-hand for thousands of cluster members, we use galaxies' position in projected phase space as a proxy for their in-fall times, which provides a more robust measurement of environment than quantities such as projected cluster-centric radius. We find clear evidence for a gradual age increase of the galaxy's mean stellar populations ( 0.71 0.4 Gyr based on a 4000 break, ) with the time spent in the cluster environment. This environmental quenching…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
