The morphology-density relationship: Looking back, thinking back

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Abstract

The work I did in the late 1970s leading to the morphology-density relation was done in a time of rising interest in how galaxies acquired different morphological types. I describe briefly here how I contributed to this effort by adding a large number of morphologies for galaxies in rich clusters and the field. The strong correlation that I discovered between galaxy type and local galaxy density ran counter to ideas at the time that emphasized processes tied to the global cluster environment. Instead, it provided some of the first evidence for a hierarchical picture - one in which the density of the environment into which a galaxy was born would be its lifetime legacy. Though often cited as a relation between galaxy morphology and the influence of present-epoch environment, the morphology-density relation was interpreted by me, from the first, as the influence of the early environment of galaxy formation, passed down by the hierarchical growth of structure. In fact, it seems increasingly likely that the more fundamental correlation of galaxy morphology is with galaxy mass, and that the morphology- density relation is basically an expression of the prevalence of more massive galaxies in regions of higher galaxy density. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2011.

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Dressler, A. (2011). The morphology-density relationship: Looking back, thinking back. In Astrophysics and Space Science Proceedings (pp. 1–12). Kluwer Academic Publishers. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-20285-8_1

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