Hubble Space Telescope Photometry and Keck Spectroscopy of the Rich Cluster MS 1054-03: Morphologies, Butcher-Oemler Effect, and the Color-Magnitude Relation at Z = 0.83

van Dokkum, Pieter G.; Franx, Marijn; Kelson, Daniel D.; Illingworth, Garth D.; Fabricant, Daniel

United States, Netherlands

Abstract

We present a study of 81 I-band selected, spectroscopically confirmed members of the X-ray cluster MS 1054-03 at z=0.83. Redshifts and spectral types were determined from Keck spectroscopy. Morphologies and accurate colors were determined from a large mosaic of HST WFPC2 images in RF606W and IF814W, corresponding to U and B in the rest frame. Early-type galaxies constitute only 44% of this galaxy population. This fraction is much lower than in comparable rich clusters at low redshift. Thirty-nine percent are spiral galaxies, and 17% are mergers. The early-type galaxies follow a tight and well-defined color-magnitude relation, with the exception of a few outliers. The observed scatter is 0.029+/-0.005 mag in rest frame U-B. Most of the mergers lie close to the CM relation defined by the early-type galaxies. They are bluer by only 0.07+/-0.02 mag, and the scatter in their colors is 0.07+/-0.04 mag. Spiral galaxies in MS 1054-03 exhibit a large range in their colors. The bluest spiral galaxies are ~0.7 mag bluer than the early-type galaxies, but the majority is within +/-0.2 mag of the early-type galaxy sequence. The red colors of the mergers and the majority of the spiral galaxies are reflected in the fairly low Butcher-Oemler blue fraction of MS 1054-03: fB=0.22+/-0.05, similar to intermediate redshift clusters and much lower than previously reported values for clusters at z~0.8. The slope and scatter of the CM relation of early-type galaxies are roughly constant with redshift, confirming previous studies that were based on ground-based color measurements and very limited membership information. However, the scatter in the combined sample of early-type galaxies and mergers (i.e., the sample of future early-type galaxies) is twice as high as the scatter of the early-type galaxies alone. This is a direct demonstration of the ``progenitor bias'': high-redshift early-type galaxies seem to form a homogeneous, old population because the progenitors of the youngest present-day early-type galaxies are not included in the sample.

Based on observations with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, obtained at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by AURA, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555.

Based on observations obtained at the W. M. Keck Observatory, which is operated jointly by the California Institute of Technology and the University of California.

2000 The Astrophysical Journal
eHST 271