Galaxy Evolution in Clusters of Galaxies

Start year
2004
Organizational Unit

Related grants:

    General
    Description

    Galaxies in the universe can be located in different environments, some of them are isolated or in low density regions and they are usually called field galaxies. The others can be located in galaxy associations, going from loose groups to clusters or even superclusters of galaxies. One of the foremost challenges of the modern Astrophysics is to achieve a complete theory about galaxy evolution. This theory should explain the relation between the environment and galaxy evolution. Galaxy clusters are high density environments where galaxies interact one to each other and with the intracluster material (ICM). In addition, the cluster dynamics is driven by the high density and quantity of dark matter present in them. Therefore, galaxy clusters are complex systems with multiple components (galaxies, ICM, dark matter) which are tightly bounded. The mix of all these components, as well as their interactions, makes galaxy clusters ideal laboratories to study the different mechanisms which cause the different evolution of galaxies in this high density environments with respect to field galaxies.

    The objective of this project is to study the formation and evolution of galaxies in these dense environments. The ‘Galaxy Evolution in Clusters’ group intend to understand in what environment each of the mechanisms proposed by numerical simulations to transform the galaxies dominates and how the evolution of the different types of galaxies (both bright and dwarf) occurs in the clusters. Quantifying observationally the efficiency of these mechanisms is not an easy task since many of them act at the same time, they do it in very different time scales, and in diverse regions of the cluster. However, there are some observational evidences that can be directly contrasted: i) morphological and structural distribution of the galaxies of the clusters; ii) luminosity function of galaxies in clusters; iii) diffuse light (quantity and distribution); iv) presence of galactic substructures within the clusters; v) spectro-photometric properties of dwarf and bright galaxies; vi) ICM properties. All these observables provide the necessary information to understand the relationship between environment and galactic evolution. These are the quantities this project aims at measuring for large samples of galaxy clusters.

    Principal investigator
    Project staff
    1. Intrinsic Shape of Galactic Bars. We find, for the first time, that 52% (16%) of bulges are thicker (flatter) than the surrounding bar. We suggest that these percentages might be representative of the fraction of classical and disc-like bulges in our sample, respectively.
    2. The Influence of the Environment in the Star Formation Quenching. Our results indicate that in low-density environments, post-starburst galaxies are formed by gas-rich minor mergers or accretions, whereas for high-density environments PSBs would be produced by the removal of the gas reservoirs of emission line galaxies by ram-pressure stripping.
    3. Morpho-Kinematic Properties of Galactic Bulges. We find that photometric diagnostics to separate different types of bulges (disc-like versus classical) might not be useful for S0 galaxies. Using the morpho-kinematics properties of S0 bulges derived in this paper we suggest that they are mainly formed by dissipational processes happening at high redshift.

    Related publications

    Stellar populations of bulges in 14 cluster disc galaxies 2008MNRAS.389..341M
    Polar bulges and polar nuclear discs: the case of NGC 4698 2012MNRAS.423L..79C
    The Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys Coma Cluster Survey. I. Survey Objectives and Design 2008ApJS..176..424C
    The HST/ACS Coma Cluster Survey. II. Data Description and Source Catalogs 2010ApJS..191..143H
    The complex structure of Abell 2345: a galaxy cluster with non-symmetric radio relics 2010A&A...521A..78B
    Orbit determination of close binary systems using lucky imaging 2012MNRAS.419..197R
    Optical analysis of the poor clusters Abell 610, Abell 725, and Abell 796, containing diffuse radio sources 2008A&A...487...33B
    Internal dynamics of the galaxy cluster Abell 959 2009A&A...495...15B
    Internal dynamics of the galaxy cluster Abell 545. The ideal case where to study the simultaneous formation of a galaxy system and its brightest galaxy 2011A&A...529A.128B
    Internal dynamics of Abell 2294: a massive, likely merging cluster 2010A&A...517A..65G
    Internal dynamics of Abell 2254: a merging galaxy cluster with a clumpy, diffuse radio emission 2011A&A...536A..89G
    Internal dynamics of Abell 1240: a galaxy cluster with symmetric double radio relics 2009A&A...503..357B
    Glancing Views of the Earth: From a Lunar Eclipse to an Exoplanetary Transit 2012ApJ...755..103G
    Environmental effects on the bright end of the galaxy luminosity function in galaxy clusters 2012A&A...540A..90B
    Earth's transmission spectrum from lunar eclipse observations 2009Natur.459..814P
    Cluster Abell 520: a perspective based on member galaxies. A cluster forming at the crossing of three filaments? 2008A&A...491..379G
    Abell 1758N from an optical point of view: new insights on a merging cluster with diffuse radio emission 2012A&A...540A..43B
    Which Galaxies Host Bars and Disks? A Study of the Coma Cluster 2010ApJ...711L..61M
    Thin discs, thick dwarfs and the effects of stellar feedback 2010MNRAS.406L..65S
    The redshift and broad-band spectral energy distribution of NRAO 150 2010A&A...519A...5A
    The population of barred galaxies in the local universe. I. Detection and characterisation of bars 2009A&A...495..491A
    The ionized gas in the CALIFA early-type galaxies. I. Mapping two representative cases: NGC 6762 and NGC 5966 2012A&A...540A..11K
    The intrinsic dispersion in the Faber-Jackson relation for early-type galaxies as function of the mass and redshift 2011A&A...534A..61N
    The host in blue compact galaxies.. Structural properties and scaling relations 2009A&A...501...75A
    The Faber-Jackson relation for early-type galaxies: dependence on the magnitude range 2010A&A...516A..96N
    The edge of the M 87 halo and the kinematics of the diffuse light in the Virgo cluster core 2009A&A...502..771D
    The bright galaxy population of five medium redshift clusters. II. Quantitative galaxy morphology 2009A&A...506.1071A
    The bright galaxy population of five medium redshift clusters. I. Color-magnitude relation, blue fractions, and visual morphology 2008A&A...487..453A
    The Alhambra Survey: a Large Area Multimedium-Band Optical and Near-Infrared Photometric Survey 2008AJ....136.1325M
    Structural properties of disk galaxies. I. The intrinsic equatorial ellipticity of bulges 2008A&A...478..353M
    Stellar physics with the ALHAMBRA photometric system 2011JPhCS.328a2004A
    Search for Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies During Quiescence. II. Metallicities of Gas and Stars, Ages, and Star Formation Rates 2009ApJ...698.1497S
    Revisiting the Hubble sequence in the SDSS DR7 spectroscopic sample: a publicly available Bayesian automated classification 2011A&A...525A.157H
    Quasi-stellar objects in the ALHAMBRA survey. I. Photometric redshift accuracy based on 23 optical-NIR filter photometry 2012A&A...542A..20M
    Properties of the Photometric Components of Lenticular Galaxies 2012AdAst2012E..28A
    Properties of the Dwarf Galaxy Population in Galaxy Clusters 2008ApJ...679L..77S
    Optimal Filter Systems for Photometric Redshift Estimation 2009ApJ...692L...5B
    On the origin of dwarf elliptical galaxies: the fundamental plane 2009A&A...494..891A
    Near-Infrared Galaxy Counts and Evolution from the Wide-Field ALHAMBRA Survey 2009ApJ...696.1554C
    Intracluster light in the Virgo cluster: large scale distribution 2009A&A...507..621C

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