Return to search

Determining the Halo Mass Scale Where Galaxies Lose Their Gas

A major question in galaxy formation is how the gas supply that fuels activity in galaxies is modulated by their environment. We use spectroscopy of a set of well-characterized clusters and groups at 0.4 < z < 0.8 from the ESO Distant Cluster Survey and compare it to identically selected field galaxies. Our spectroscopy allows us to isolate galaxies that are dominated by old stellar populations. Here we study a stellar-mass-limited sample (log(M*/M-circle dot) > 10.4) of these old galaxies with weak [O II] emission. We use line ratios and compare to studies of local early-type galaxies to conclude that this gas is likely excited by post-AGB stars and hence represents a diffuse gas component in the galaxies. For cluster and group galaxies the fraction with EW([O II]) > 5 angstrom is f([O II]) = 0.08(-0.03)(+0.02) and f([O II]) = 0.06(-0.04)(+0.07), respectively. For field galaxies we find f([O II]) = 0.2 (+0.07)(-0.06), representing a 2.8 sigma difference between the [O II] fractions for old galaxies between the different environments. We conclude that a population of old galaxies in all environments has ionized gas that likely stems from stellar mass loss. In the field galaxies also experience gas accretion from the cosmic web, and in groups and clusters these galaxies have had their gas accretion shut off by their environment. Additionally, galaxies with emission preferentially avoid the virialized region of the cluster in position-velocity space. We discuss the implications of our results, among which is that gas accretion shutoff is likely effective at group halo masses (log M/M-circle dot > 12.8) and that there are likely multiple gas removal processes happening in dense environments.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:arizona.edu/oai:arizona.openrepository.com:10150/627106
Date30 November 2017
CreatorsRudnick, Gregory, Jablonka, Pascale, Moustakas, John, Aragón-Salamanca, Alfonso, Zaritsky, Dennis, Jaffé, Yara L., Lucia, Gabriella De, Desai, Vandana, Halliday, Claire, Just, Dennis, Milvang-Jensen, Bo, Poggianti, Bianca
ContributorsUniv Arizona
PublisherIOP PUBLISHING LTD
Source SetsUniversity of Arizona
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeArticle
Rights© 2017. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
Relationhttp://stacks.iop.org/0004-637X/850/i=2/a=181?key=crossref.81fd7e504b7d61b46fd9b9b821175fee

Page generated in 0.0126 seconds