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It is well-known that galaxy environment has a fundamental effect in shaping its properties. We study the environmental effects on galaxy evolution, with an emphasis on the environment defined as the local number density of galaxies. The density field is estimated with different estimators (weighted adaptive kernel smoothing, 10$^{th}$ and 5$^{th}$ nearest neighbors, Voronoi and Delaunay tessellation) for a K$_{s}<$24 sample of $sim$190,000 galaxies in the COSMOS field at 0.1$<$z$<$3.1. The performance of each estimator is evaluated with extensive simulations. We show that overall, there is a good agreement between the estimated density fields using different methods over $sim$2 dex in overdensity values. However, our simulations show that adaptive kernel and Voronoi tessellation outperform other methods. Using the Voronoi tessellation method, we assign surface densities to a mass complete sample of quiescent and star-forming galaxies out to z$sim$3. We show that at a fixed stellar mass, the median color of quiescent galaxies does not depend on their host environment out to z$sim$3. We find that the number and stellar mass density of massive ($>$10$^{11}$M$_{odot}$) star-forming galaxies have not significantly changed since z$sim$3, regardless of their environment. However, for massive quiescent systems at lower redshifts (z$lesssim$1.3), we find a significant evolution in the number and stellar mass densities in denser environments compared to lower density regions. Our results suggest that the relation between stellar mass and local density is more fundamental than the color-density relation and that environment plays a significant role in quenching star formation activity in galaxies at z$lesssim$1.
Combining the catalogue of galaxy morphologies in the COSMOS field and the sample of H$alpha$ emitters at redshifts $z=0.4$ and $z=0.84$ of the HiZELS survey, we selected $sim$ 220 star-forming bulgeless systems (Sersic index $n leq 1.5$) at both epo
Using the Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys data in the COSMOS field, we systematically searched clumpy galaxies at 0.2<z<1.0 and investigated the fraction of clumpy galaxies and its evolution as a function of stellar mass, star form
We analyse a unique sample of 517 bright ($L>L^{*}$) LBGs at redshift z$sim$3 in order to characterise the distribution of their UV slopes $beta$ and infer their dust extinction under standard assumptions. We exploited multi-band observations over 75
We present polarisation properties at $1.4,$GHz of two separate extragalactic source populations: passive quiescent galaxies and luminous quasar-like galaxies. We use data from the {it Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer} data to determine the host g
Tidal tails are created in major mergers involving disk galaxies. How the tidal tails trace the assembly history of massive galaxies remains to be explored. We identify a sample of 461 merging galaxies with long tidal tails from 35076 galaxies mass-c