A New Perspective on Galactic Evolution: Studying the Outskirts of the Abell S1063 Galaxy Cluster
L. Pecoraro, A. Mercurio, M.Annunziatella, M. D'Addona, R. Ragusa, G. Angora, M. Girardi, G. Granata, C. Grillo, L. Limatola, P. Rosati, P. Bergamini, G. Caminha, F. Getman, A. Grado, M. Meneghetti, E. Vanzella

TL;DR
This study investigates galaxy evolution in the Abell S1063 cluster at intermediate redshift using deep multiwavelength photometry, revealing dense structures and filaments in the cluster outskirts to understand environmental effects.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multiwavelength photometric catalog with redshifts and analyzes galaxy properties across environments in the cluster outskirts at intermediate redshift.
Findings
Detected dense structures near the cluster center and northwest.
Identified filaments connecting dense regions.
Provided a large photometric catalog for future studies.
Abstract
Galaxy physical properties are influenced by their environments, but the processes responsible for mass and environmental quenching and structural transformations remain debated. Galaxy clusters are ideal laboratories for investigating galaxy formation and evolution, offering a full range of galaxy properties and environments. Observations of large-scale structures, particularly filaments in cluster outskirts (), are currently constrained to the low-redshift Universe. To explore galaxy evolution at intermediate redshifts, deep photometric data, ideally combined with spectroscopic redshifts, are essential. Abell S1063 cluster ( = 0.346) is observed within the Galaxy Assembly as a function of the Mass and Environment program with the VLT Survey Telescope (VST-GAME) combined VISTA Public Survey program Galaxy Cluster At Vircam. We investigate galaxy evolution across a…
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