The galaxy population of intermediate-redshift clusters

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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16 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS

Scientific paper

10.1111/j.1365-2966.2004.07638.x

Using photometric redshifts we determine the galaxy population of the clusters of galaxies Cl0016+16 at z=0.55, Cl1600+41 at z=0.54, Cl1601+42 at z=0.54 and MS1008-1224 at z=0.31. Comparing the clusters, we find no evidence for a universal shape of the total luminosity function (LF) at these redshifts. When dividing the LFs into spectral types, we find that the LF of the early-type galaxies alone can be described by a Gaussian, while the LF of the late-type galaxies is well fitted by a Schechter function, suggesting that the separate LFs for different populations may be universal. The difference in the total LFs can mainly be attributed to the varying relative normalisation of these populations, implying that clusters with an abundant population of late-type galaxies also have steeper faint-end slopes. In MS1008-1224 we detect a faint blue population that dominates over a population with colours consistent with dwarf ellipticals, opposite to clusters at lower redshift. Compared to low redshift clusters, we find that a general fading of the late-type population by ~2 mag and the early-type population by ~1 mag describes the evolution from z=0.55 to z=0 well. As a consequence of the different early-type and late-type LFs and their dependence on cluster radius, the fraction of blue cluster galaxies, as measured by the Butcher-Oemler effect, differs between the clusters and depends on limiting magnitude and radius. We find a correlation between the dwarf-to-giant ratio and the surface density, indicating that the high density environment in the cluster cores is hostile to dwarf galaxies.

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