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Measures of galaxy environment - I. What is ‘environment’?

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posted on 2024-08-06, 09:50 authored by Stuart I. Muldrew, Darren CrotonDarren Croton, Ramin A. Skibba, Frazer R. Pearce, Hong Bae Ann, Ivan K. Baldry, Sarah Brough, Yun-Young Choi, Christopher J. Conselice, Nicolas B. Cowan, Anna Gallazzi, Meghan E. Gray, Ruth Grützbauch, I-Hui Li, Changbom Park, Sergey V. Pilipenko, Bret J. Podgorzec, Aaron S. G. Robotham, David J. Wilman, Xiaohu Yang, Youcai Zhang, Stefano Zibetti
The influence of a galaxy's environment on its evolution has been studied and compared extensively in the literature, although differing techniques are often used to define environment. Most methods fall into two broad groups: those that use nearest neighbours to probe the underlying density field and those that use fixed apertures. The differences between the two inhibit a clean comparison between analyses and leave open the possibility that, even with the same data, different properties are actually being measured. In this work, we apply 20 published environment definitions to a common mock galaxy catalogue constrained to look like the local Universe. We find that nearest-neighbour-based measures best probe the internal densities of high-mass haloes, while at low masses the interhalo separation dominates and acts to smooth out local density variations. The resulting correlation also shows that nearest-neighbour galaxy environment is largely independent of dark matter halo mass. Conversely, aperture-based methods that probe superhalo scales accurately identify high-density regions corresponding to high-mass haloes. Both methods show how galaxies in dense environments tend to be redder, with the exception of the largest apertures, but these are the strongest at recovering the background dark matter environment. We also warn against using photometric redshifts to define environment in all but the densest regions. When considering environment, there are two regimes: the 'local environment' internal to a halo best measured with nearest neighbour and 'large-scale environment' external to a halo best measured with apertures. This leads to the conclusion that there is no universal environment measure and the most suitable method depends on the scale being probed.

Funding

Danish National Research Foundation

Science and Technology Facilities Council

Australian Research Council

History

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

0035-8711

Journal title

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume

419

Issue

3

Pagination

12 pp

Publisher

Wiley

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2011 The authors. Journal copyright © 2011 Royal Astronomical Society. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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