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Star Formation in High-Redshift Cluster Ellipticals

Authors :
Peter R. Eisenhardt
Mark Brodwin
Conor L. Mancone
Cory R. Wagner
Alexandra Pope
Ranga-Ram Chary
Gregory F. Snyder
Stacey Alberts
Spencer A. Stanford
John Moustakas
Daniel Stern
Arjun Dey
Anthony H. Gonzalez
Gregory R. Zeimann
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
arXiv, 2014.

Abstract

We measure the star formation rates (SFRs) of massive ($M_{\star}>10^{10.1}M_{\odot}$) early-type galaxies (ETGs) in a sample of 11 high-redshift ($1.0 < z < 1.5$) galaxy clusters drawn from the IRAC Shallow Cluster Survey (ISCS). We identify ETGs visually from Hubble Space Telescope imaging and select likely cluster members as having either an appropriate spectroscopic redshift or red sequence color. Mid-infrared SFRs are measured using Spitzer 24 $��$m data for isolated cluster galaxies for which contamination by neighbors, and active galactic nuclei, can be ruled out. Cluster ETGs show enhanced specific star formation rates (sSFRs) compared to cluster galaxies in the local Universe, but have sSFRs more than four times lower than that of field ETGs at $1 < z < 1.5$. Relative to the late-type cluster population, isolated ETGs show substantially quenched mean SFRs, yet still contribute 12% of the overall star formation activity measured in $1 < z < 1.5$ clusters. We find that new ETGs are likely being formed in ISCS clusters; the fraction of cluster galaxies identified as ETGs increases from 34% to 56% from $z \sim 1.5 \rightarrow 1.25$. While the fraction of cluster ETGs that are highly star-forming ($\textrm{SFR}\geq26\ M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$) drops from 27% to 10% over the same period, their sSFRs are roughly constant. All these factors taken together suggest that, particularly at $z\gtrsim1.25$, the events that created these distant cluster ETGs$-$likely mergers, at least among the most massive$-$were both recent and gas-rich.<br />12 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4152c509d238c4099ac296b99c4f34e8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1412.6717