We present Halpha-derived star-formation rates (SFRs) for three z ~ 0.75 galaxy clusters. Our 1 sigma flux limit corresponds to a star-formation rate of 0.10-0.24 solar mass per year, and our minimum reliable Halpha + [N II] rest-frame equivalent width is 10\AA. We show that Halpha narrowband imaging is an efficient method for measuring star formation in distant clusters. In two out of three clusters, we find that the fraction of star-forming galaxies increases with projected distance from the cluster center. We also find that the fraction of star-forming galaxies decreases with increasing local galaxy surface density in the same two clusters. We compare the median rate of star formation among star-forming cluster galaxies to a small sample of star-forming field galaxies from the literature and find that the median cluster SFRs are \~50% less than the median field SFR. We characterize cluster evolution in terms of the mass-normalized integrated cluster SFR and find that the z ~ 0.75 clusters have more SFR per cluster mass on average than the z
CITATION STYLE
Finn, R. A., Zaritsky, D., McCarthy, Jr., D. W., Poggianti, B., Rudnick, G., Halliday, C., … Simard, L. (2005). Hα‐derived Star Formation Rates for Three z ≃0.75 EDisCS Galaxy Clusters. The Astrophysical Journal, 630(1), 206–227. https://doi.org/10.1086/431642
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