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Published March 1, 2017 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Cosmic Web of Galaxies in the COSMOS Field: Public Catalog and Different Quenching for Centrals and Satellites

Abstract

We use a mass complete (log(M/M⊙) ⩾ 9.6) sample of galaxies with accurate photometric redshifts in the COSMOS field to construct the density field and the cosmic web to z = 1.2. The comic web extraction relies on the density field Hessian matrix and breaks the density field into clusters, filaments, and the field. We provide the density field and cosmic web measures to the community. We show that at z ≾ 0.8, the median star formation rate (SFR) in the cosmic web gradually declines from the field to clusters and this decline is especially sharp for satellites (~1 dex versus ~0.5 dex for centrals). However, at z ≳ 0.8, the trend flattens out for the overall galaxy population and satellites. For star-forming (SF) galaxies only, the median SFR is constant at z ≳ 0.5 but declines by ~0.3–0.4 dex from the field to clusters for satellites and centrals at z ≾ 0.5. We argue that for satellites, the main role of the cosmic web environment is to control their SF fraction, whereas for centrals, it is mainly to control their overall SFR at z ≾ 0.5 and to set their fraction at z ≳ 0.5. We suggest that most satellites experience a rapid quenching mechanism as they fall from the field into clusters through filaments, whereas centrals mostly undergo a slow environmental quenching at z ≾ 0.5 and a fast mechanism at higher redshifts. Our preliminary results highlight the importance of the large-scale cosmic web on galaxy evolution.

Additional Information

© 2017 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2016 November 3; revised 2016 December 23; accepted 2017 January 5; published 2017 February 28. We are immensely grateful to the anonymous referee for their useful comments that greatly improved the quality of this work. B.D. acknowledges financial support from NASA through the Astrophysics Data Analysis Program (ADAP), grant number NNX12AE20G. B.D. wishes to thank Adam Muzzin for his useful comments. D.S. acknowledges financial support from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) through a Veni fellowship and from Lancaster University through an Early Career Internal Grant A100679. This work is based on data products from observations made with ESO Telescopes at the La Silla Paranal Observatory under ESO programme ID 179.A-2005 and on data products produced by TERAPIX and the Cambridge Astronomy Survey Unit on behalf of the UltraVISTA consortium.

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Published - Darvish_2017_ApJ_837_16.pdf

Submitted - 1611.05451.pdf

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August 19, 2023
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