Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS): Satellite Quenching at Intermediate Redshift
L. J. M. Davies, M. F. Fuentealba-Fuentes, R. J. Wright, M. Bravo, S. Wagh, M. Siudek

TL;DR
This study uses new environmental metrics from the DEVILS survey to analyze satellite galaxy quenching at intermediate redshift, revealing increased suppression of star formation in satellites over time and in denser environments, consistent with prior findings.
Contribution
It introduces a methodology for comparing satellite galaxy properties across different redshifts using identical environmental metrics, reducing biases in environmental analysis.
Findings
Satellite galaxies show suppressed star formation compared to isolated systems.
Suppression is strongest in high-mass dark matter halos.
Passive fractions of satellites increase over the last 5 billion years.
Abstract
Determining the processes by which galaxies transition from a star-forming to a quiescent state (quenching) is paramount to our understanding of galaxy evolution. One of the key mechanisms by which this takes place is via a galaxy's interactions with a local, over-dense environment (satellite or environmental quenching). In the very local Universe, we see these processes in action, and can also observe their effects via the distribution of satellite galaxy properties. However, extending similar analyses outside of the local Universe is problematic, largely due to the difficulties in robustly defining environments with small and/or incomplete spectroscopic samples. We use new environmental metrics from the high-completeness Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS) to explore the properties of satellite galaxies at intermediate redshift (0.3z0.5) and compare directly to the…
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