Galaxy Evolution in thez= 0.4274 Cluster MS 1621.5+2640
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 507 (1), 84-101
- https://doi.org/10.1086/306309
Abstract
We discuss the galaxy population of the rich cluster MS 1621.5+2640 at z = 0.4274, based on spectra and imaging in a field of size 9' × 23' (~2 × 5 h-1 Mpc). The sample comprises 277 galaxies, of which 112 are cluster members, 7 are "near-members," and 47 are field galaxies in the redshift range 0.37 ≤ z ≤ 0.50. The results are analyzed and compared with the z = 0.2279 rich cluster Abell 2390. MS 1621.5+2640 has a higher blue fraction and a younger stellar population, and it is a less evolved cluster. We do not find strong evidence of significant excess star formation compared with the field, although there is a small population of outlying near-members that is unusually blue and that may be affected by the cluster. There is a substantial population of red galaxies with significant Hδ absorption, which are not easily explained by any simple form of modeled star formation history. We detect two distinct populations of cluster galaxies: those where star formation ceased some time ago, and those with a gradual decrease over many Gyr. Our data suggests that the cluster formed by accretion from the field, with truncation of the star formation beginning at very large radii (>2 times the virial radius). The truncation process does not seem to be a sharp one though, in that lower luminosity early-type galaxies in the inner core of the cluster are seen with significant Hδ absorption, indicating some star formation within the last 1-2 Gyr. Some combination of stripping of gas from the outer parts of the galaxy together with a gradual exhaustion of the gas in the inner parts would be consistent with our data.Keywords
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