Exploring Galaxy Evolution Time-Scales in Clusters: Insights from the Projected Phase Space
V. M. Sampaio, R. R. de Carvalho, A. Arag\'on-Salamanca, M. R., Merrifield, I. Ferreras, D. J. Cornwell

TL;DR
This study investigates the timescales and processes of galaxy quenching and morphological transformation in clusters, revealing that morphological changes often occur before star formation is fully quenched, especially in low-mass galaxies.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the sequence and timescales of galaxy evolution processes in clusters, supporting a 'slow-then-rapid' quenching model and highlighting the spatial and morphological aspects.
Findings
Low-mass galaxies spend about 0.4 Gyr in the green valley.
Morphological transformation occurs at larger radii than star formation quenching.
Approximately 75% of galaxies transitioning are spirals evolving into S0s.
Abstract
Galaxies infalling into clusters undergo both star-formation quenching and morphological transformation due to environmental effects. We investigate these processes and their timescales using a local sample of 20,191 cluster and 11,674 field galaxies from SDSS. By analysing morphology as a function of distance from the star-formation main sequence, we show that environmental influence is especially pronounced for low-mass galaxies, which emerge from the green valley with early-type morphologies before their star formation is fully suppressed. Using the galaxies' positions in the clusters' Projected Phase Space, we examine the evolution of blue cloud, green valley, and red sequence fractions as a function of time since infall. Interestingly, the green valley fraction remains constant with time since infall, suggesting a balanced flow of galaxies in and out of this class. We estimate that…
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