On the Origin of the Scatter in the Red Sequence: An Analysis of Four CLASH Clusters

In clusters of galaxies, the red sequence is believed to be a consequence of a correlation between stellar mass and chemical abundances, with more massive galaxies being more metal-rich and, as a consequence, redder. However, there is a color scatter around the red sequence that holds even with prec...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2019-04, Vol.875 (1), p.16
Hauptverfasser: Connor, Thomas, Kelson, Daniel D., Donahue, Megan, Moustakas, John
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Kelson, Daniel D.
Donahue, Megan
Moustakas, John
description In clusters of galaxies, the red sequence is believed to be a consequence of a correlation between stellar mass and chemical abundances, with more massive galaxies being more metal-rich and, as a consequence, redder. However, there is a color scatter around the red sequence that holds even with precision photometry, implying that the galaxy population is more complicated than as described by a mass-metallicity relation. We use precision photometry from the Cluster Lensing and Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH) to investigate what drives this scatter. In four CLASH clusters at z = 0.355 0.007, we find that the optical-IR galaxy colors confirm the previously known trend of metallicity along the red sequence but also show a strong connection between stellar age and red sequence offset, with ages ranging from 3 to 8 Gyr. Starting with fixed-age color-magnitude relations motivated by the mass-metallicity correlations of CLASH cluster galaxies, and by adjusting galaxy colors through stellar population models to put them all at the age of our red sequence, we are able to reduce the, e.g., F625W-F814W scatter from 0.051 to 0.026 mag with median photometric errors of 0.029 mag. While we will extend this analysis to the full CLASH sample, in four clusters our technique already provides a color precision in near-total-light apertures to resolve the spread in stellar population formation ages that drives the scatter in the red sequence.
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subjects Apertures
Astronomical models
Astrophysics
Color
Correlation
Galactic clusters
Galaxies
galaxies: clusters: general
galaxies: evolution
galaxies: formation
Metallicity
Organic chemistry
Photometry
Scattering
Stars & galaxies
Stellar age
Stellar mass
Stellar models
Supernova
title On the Origin of the Scatter in the Red Sequence: An Analysis of Four CLASH Clusters
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