Euclid Quick Data Release (Q1). Quenching precedes bulge formation in dense environments but follows it in the field
Euclid Collaboration: F. Gentile (1, 2), E. Daddi (3), D. Elbaz (3), A. Enia (4, 2), B. Magnelli (3), J-B. Billand (1), P. Corcho-Caballero (5), C. Cleland (6), G. De Lucia (7), C. D'Eugenio (8, 1), M. Fossati (9, 10), M. Franco (3), C. Lobo (11, 12), Y. Lyu (1)

TL;DR
This study uses Euclid data to analyze galaxy evolution, revealing environment-dependent sequences where quenching and morphological transformation occur in different orders in dense versus field regions.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale analysis linking galaxy quenching, morphology, and environment, proposing environment-specific evolutionary pathways.
Findings
Quiescent disc galaxies are more common in dense environments at low mass.
Star-forming bulge-dominated galaxies are prevalent in the field at high mass.
Galaxy evolution pathways differ significantly between dense environments and the field.
Abstract
(Abridged) The bimodality between star-forming discs and quiescent spheroids requires the existence of two main processes: the galaxy quenching and the morphological transformation. In this paper, we aim to understand the link between these processes and their relation with the stellar mass of galaxies and their local environment. Taking advantage of the first data released by the Euclid Collaboration, covering more than 60 deg2 with space-based imaging and photometry, we analyse a mass-complete sample of nearly one million galaxies in the range 0.25<z<1 with . We divide the sample into four sub-populations of galaxies, based on their star-formation activity and morphology. We then analyse the physical properties of these populations and their relative abundances in the stellar mass vs. local density plane. Together with confirming the passivity-density relation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Electrical and Electromagnetic Research
