Evolution of Group Galaxies from the First Red-Sequence Cluster Survey

Abstract

We study the evolution of the red galaxy fraction (fred) in 905 galaxy groups with 0.15 < z < 0.52. The galaxy groups are identified by the `probability Friends-of-Friends' algorithm from the first Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (RCS1) photometric-redshift sample. There is a high degree of uniformity in the properties of the red-sequence of the group galaxies, indicating that the luminous red-sequence galaxies in the groups are already in place by z~0.5 and that they have a formation epoch of z>2. In general, groups at lower redshifts exhibit larger fred than those at higher redshifts, showing a group Butcher-Oemler effect. We investigate the evolution of fred by examining its dependence on four parameters, which can be classified as one intrinsic and three environmental: galaxy stellar mass (M*), total group stellar mass(M*,grp, a proxy for group halo mass), normalized group-centric radius (rgrp), and local galaxy density (Sigma5). We find that M* is the dominant parameter such that there is a strong correlation between fred and galaxy stellar mass. Furthermore, the dependence of fred on the environmental parameters is also a strong function of M*. Massive galaxies (M* > 1011 Msun) show little dependence of fred on rgrp, M*,grp, and Sigma5 over the redshift range. The dependence of fred on these parameters is primarily seen for galaxies with lower masses, especially for M* < 1010.6 Msun. We observe an apparent `group down-sizing' effect, in that galaxies in lower-mass halos, after controlling for galaxy stellar mass, have lower fred. We find a dependence of on both and after the other parameters are controlled. At a fixed , there is a significant dependence of fred on Sigma5, while rgrp gradients of fred are seen for galaxies in similar Sigma5 regions. This indicates .....

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