4.7 Article

THE 10k zCOSMOS: MORPHOLOGICAL TRANSFORMATION OF GALAXIES IN THE GROUP ENVIRONMENT SINCE z ∼ 1

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 718, Issue 1, Pages 86-104

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/718/1/86

Keywords

galaxies: clusters: general; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: high-redshift; galaxies: luminosity function, mass function; galaxies: structure

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [ASI/COFIS/WP3110I/026/07/0]

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We study the evolution of galaxies inside and outside of the group environment since z = 1 using a large well-defined set of groups and galaxies from the zCOSMOS-bright redshift survey in the COSMOS field. The fraction of galaxies with early-type morphologies increases monotonically with M(B) luminosity and stellar mass and with cosmic epoch. It is higher in the groups than elsewhere, especially at later epochs. The emerging environmental effect is superposed on a strong global mass-driven evolution, and at z similar to 0.5 and log(M(*)/M(circle dot)) similar to 10.2, the effect of the group environment is equivalent to (only) about 0.2 dex in stellar mass or 2 Gyr in time. The stellar mass function of galaxies in groups is enriched in massive galaxies. We directly determine the transformation rates from late to early morphologies, and for transformations involving color and star formation indicators. The transformation rates are systematically about twice as high in the groups as outside, or up to three to four times higher correcting for infall and the appearance of new groups. The rates reach values as high as 0.3-0.7 Gyr(-1) in the groups (for masses around the crossing mass 10(10.5) M(circle dot)), implying transformation timescales of 1.4-3 Gyr, compared with less than 0.2 Gyr(-1), i.e., timescales >5 Gyr, outside of groups. All three transformation rates decrease at higher stellar masses, and must also decrease at lower masses below 10(10) M(circle dot) which we cannot probe well. The rates involving color and star formation are consistently higher than those for morphology, by a factor of about 50%. Our conclusion is that the transformations that drive the evolution of the overall galaxy population since z similar to 1 must occur at a rate two to four times higher in groups than outside of them.

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