We analyse the u-r color distribution of 24346 galaxies with Mr <0.08, drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey first data release, as a function of luminosity and environment. The color distribution is well fit with two Gaussian distributions, which we use to divide the sample into a blue and red population. At fixed luminosity, the mean color of the blue (red) distribution is nearly independent of environment, with a weakly significant (~3sigma) detection of a trend for colors to become redder by 0.1-0.14 (0.03-0.06) mag with a factor ~100 increase in local density, as characterised by the surface density of galaxies within a +/-1000 km/s redshift slice. In contrast, at fixed luminosity the fraction of galaxies in the red distribution is a strong function of local density, increasing from ~10-30 per cent of the population in the lowest density environments, to ~70 per cent at the highest densities. The strength of this trend is similar for both the brightest (-23
CITATION STYLE
Balogh, M. L., Baldry, I. K., Nichol, R., Miller, C., Bower, R., & Glazebrook, K. (2004). The Bimodal Galaxy Color Distribution: Dependence on Luminosity and Environment. The Astrophysical Journal, 615(2), L101–L104. https://doi.org/10.1086/426079
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