Differential Galaxy Evolution in Cluster and Field Galaxies at z=0.3
Michael L. Balogh (1), S. L. Morris (2), H. K. C. Yee (3), R. G., Carlberg (3), and E. Ellingson (4) ((1) U. Victoria, (2) DAO, HIA, NRC (3) U., Toronto (4) CASA Colorado)

TL;DR
This study investigates galaxy evolution in clusters versus the field at z=0.3, finding minimal recent starburst activity in clusters and suggesting gradual star formation truncation rather than rapid bursts.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral index analysis of a large galaxy sample at intermediate redshift, revealing that star formation truncation in clusters is likely a slow process.
Findings
Cluster galaxies are older than field galaxies.
Less than 2% of galaxies show signs of recent star formation truncation.
No significant excess of recent starburst galaxies in clusters.
Abstract
(abridged) We measure spectral indices for 1823 galaxies in the CNOC1 sample of fifteen X-ray luminous clusters at 0.18<z<0.55, to investigate the mechanisms responsible for differential evolution between the galaxy cluster and field environments. The radial trends of D4000, Hdelta and [OII] are all consistent with an age sequence, in the sense that the last episode of star formation occurred more recently in galaxies farthest from the cluster center. Throughout the cluster environment, galaxies show evidence for older mean stellar populations than field galaxies. From the subsample of galaxies more luminous than M_r=-18.8 + 5log h, we identify a sample of K+A galaxies, which may result from recently terminated star formation. Corrected for a systematic effect which results from the large uncertainties on individual spectral index measurements, we estimate that K+A galaxies make up only…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
