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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sutanto, Ryo Albert, Morishita, Takahiro, Kodama, Tadayuki, Abdurro'uf, Bradley, Larry D., Bunker, Andrew J., Chartab, Nima, Chen, Nuo, Hayes, Matthew J., Helou, George, Haryana, Novan Saputra, Leethochawalit, Nicha, Liu, Zhaoran, Mason, Charlotte A., Rafelski, Marc, Rutkowski, Michael J., Stiavelli, Massimo, Takahashi, Kosuke, Teplitz, Harry I., Trenti, Michele, Treu, Tommaso, Vulcani, Benedetta, Zhang, Yechi
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.04333
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Table of Contents:
  • We systematically search for galaxy overdensities using 20 independent fields with a minimum of six filters (F090W, F115W, F150W, F277W, F356W, and F444W) from BEACON, the JWST Cycle 2 NIRCam pure-parallel imaging survey. We apply an adaptive kernel-density estimation method that incorporates the full photometric redshift probability distribution function of each galaxy to map galaxy overdensities, and identify 207 significant ($>4\,σ$) overdensities at $1.5<z<5$. We measure the quenched-galaxy fraction, the median specific star formation rate (sSFR), the total halo mass, and the local galaxy density of each system. By investigating the correlation among these observables, we find that galaxy quenching proceeds in two paths:($i$) Overdensities within more massive halos exhibit higher quenched fractions and lower averaged sSFRs. This trend weakens at $z\gtrsim2$, consistent with cold gas streams penetrating shock-heated massive halos and sustaining star formation activity at early times. ($ii$) We also find a dependence of the same parameters on local densities at $z<2$, where the quenched fraction increases and the sSFR decreases toward higher densities. The environmental trend in sSFR weakens at $z\sim2$--$3$ and shows tentative evidence for a reversal at $z>3$, potentially due to a larger cold gas supply in earlier times. Our study reveals a complex interplay between individual galaxies and large-scale environmental properties, marking the onset of environmental effects on galaxy quenching in massive halos at cosmic noon.