4.7 Article

Semi-empirical analysis of Sloan Digital Sky Survey galaxies -: IV.: A nature via nurture scenario for galaxy evolution

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 374, Issue 4, Pages 1457-1472

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.11290.x

Keywords

stars : formation; galaxies : evolution; galaxies : formation; galaxies : fundamental parameters; galaxies : stellar content

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We investigate the environmental dependence of stellar population properties of galaxies in the local Universe. Physical quantities related to the stellar content of galaxies are derived from a spectral synthesis method applied to a volume-limited sample containing more than 60 000 galaxies (0.04 < z < 0.075; M-r <= -19.9), extracted from the Data Release 4 of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Mean stellar ages, mean stellar metallicities and stellar masses are obtained from this method and used to characterize the stellar populations of galaxies. The environment is defined by the projected local galaxy density estimated from a nearest neighbour approach. We recover the star formation-density relation in terms of the mean light-weighted stellar age, which is strongly correlated with star formation parameters derived from H alpha. We find that the age-density relation is distinct when we divide galaxies according to luminosity or stellar mass. The relation is remarkable for galaxies in all bins of luminosity. On the other hand, only for an intermediate stellar mass interval (associated to a transition in galaxy properties) the relation shows a change in galaxy properties with environment. Such distinct behaviours are associated to the large stellar masses of galaxies with the same luminosity in high-density environments. In addition, the well-known star formation-density relation results from the prevalence of massive systems in high-density environments, independently of galaxy luminosity, with the additional observed downsizing in galaxy formation, in which the star formation is shifted from massive galaxies at early times to low-mass galaxies as the Universe evolves. Finally, our results support that a natural path for galaxy evolution proceeds via a nurture way, in the sense that galaxy evolution is accelerated in denser environments, that took place mainly at high redshifts.

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