The observed properties of galaxies have long been known to depend on
the environment in which they are located. The physical origin of the
observed environmental trends is, however, still a subject of
debate. Much of the argument centres on whether these trends are the
end products of physical processes acting over the entire lifetime of
a galaxy (the nurture hypothesis), or whether they are established at
formation (the nature hypothesis). One element is often overlooked in
this debate: according to the current paradigm for structure
formation, dark matter collapses into haloes in a bottom-up
fashion. Small objects form first and subsequently merge into
progressively larger systems. As structure grows, galaxies join more
and more massive systems, and so experience a variety of environments
over their lifetimes. Thus both initial conditions and subsequent
physical processes must play a role in shaping the observed properties
of galaxies, and their variation with environment.
The project
will carry out a detailed investigation of the relative roles of
various physical processes, and of conditions at formation in
determining the observed environmental trends. The work will exploit
synergies between different theoretical methods, and will involve
detailed comparisons with observational data from spectroscopic and
photometric surveys at both low and high redshift.
The results
should provide the first quantitative estimate of the relative
importance of nature and nurture in determining the observed
environmental trends within the current standard picture of structure
formation. In addition, results from this study will be of important
guidance for interpreting data from ongoing and planned surveys, and
will provide precious and timely tools for the preparation of key
programs and surveys for planned or proposed space missions and large
telescope instruments (e.g. ELT, JWST, Herschel, etc.).