Galaxy evolution in compact groups - III. Structural analysis of galaxies and dynamical state of non-isolated compact groups
Gissel P. Montaguth, Ana Laura O'Mill, Claudia Mendes de Oliveira, Ciria Lima-Dias, Sergio Torres-Flores, Antonela Monachesi, D. E. Olave-Rojas, Diego Pallero, Pedro K. Humire, Ricardo Demarco, Eduardo Telles, Paulo A. A. Lopes, Swayamtrupta Panda, Rodrigo F. Haack

TL;DR
This study analyzes galaxy structures in non-isolated compact groups using multi-band data, revealing distinct evolutionary paths and environmental influences compared to surrounding galaxies, with implications for galaxy transformation processes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed structural and dynamical analysis of galaxies in non-isolated compact groups, highlighting their unique evolutionary characteristics and the impact of the compact environment.
Findings
Higher quenched fractions and more ETGs in non-isolated CGs for massive galaxies
Sérsic indices increase with wavelength across environments
Transition galaxies show signs of ongoing morphological transformation
Abstract
Compact Groups (CGs) of galaxies are dense systems where projected separations are comparable to their optical diameters. A subset - non-isolated CGs - are embedded within major structures. Using multi-band S-PLUS data, we analyse galaxies in 122 non-isolated CGs within more massive systems such as larger groups and clusters. We compare them to galaxies in the host structures, hereafter surrounding group galaxies. Structural parameters were obtained with MorphoPLUS, a pipeline for multi-wavelength S\'ersic profile fitting. Dividing galaxies into early (ETG), transition, or late types (LTG), we find: (1) Non-isolated CGs host higher quenched fractions and more ETGs, especially for stellar masses , than surrounding groups. (2) S\'ersic indices increase with wavelength for all morphological types in both environments, whereas effective radii show a stronger…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
