Abstract

We took spatially resolved slit FORS2 spectra of 19 cluster galaxies at z=1.4, and 8 additional field galaxies at 1<z<1.2 using the ESO Very Large Telescope. The targets were selected from previous spectroscopic and photometric campaigns. Our spectroscopy was complemented with HST-ACS imaging in the F775W and F850LP filters, which is mandatory to derive the galaxy structural parameters accurately. We analyzed the ionized gas kinematics by extracting rotation curves from the two-dimensional spectra. Taking into account all geometrical, observational, and instrumental effects, we used these rotation curves to derive the intrinsic maximum rotation velocity (Vmax). Vmax was robustly determined for 6 cluster galaxies and 3 field galaxies. Galaxies with sky contamination or insufficient spatial rotation curve extent were not included in our analysis. We compared our sample to the local B-band Tully-Fisher relation (TFR) and the local Velocity-Size relation (VSR), finding that cluster galaxies are on average 1.6 mags brighter and a factor 2-3 smaller. We tentatively divided our cluster galaxies by total mass (i.e., Vmax) to investigate a possible mass dependency in the environmental evolution of galaxies. The average deviation from the local B-band TFR is -0.7 mags for the high-mass subsample. This mild evolution may be driven by younger stellar populations of distant galaxies with respect to their local counterparts, and thus, an increasing luminosity is expected towards higher redshifts. However, the low-mass group is made of 3 highly overluminous galaxies with average TFR offsets of -2.4 mags. This deviation can no longer be explained by the gradual evolution of SP with lookback time and thus, we suspect that we see rather compact galaxies that got an enhancement of star formation during their infall towards the dense regions of the cluster due to interactions with the intracluster medium.

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