We analyse the environmental properties of 370 local early-type galaxies
(ETGs) in the MASSIVE and ATLAS3D surveys, two complementary volume-limited
integral-field spectroscopic (IFS) galaxy surveys spanning absolute K-band
magnitude −21.5>MK>−26.6, or stellar mass 8×109<M∗<2×1012M⊙. We find these galaxies to reside in a diverse range of
environments measured by four methods: group membership (whether a galaxy is a
brightest group/cluster galaxy, satellite, or isolated), halo mass, large-scale
mass density (measured over a few Mpc), and local mass density (measured within
the Nth neighbour). The spatially resolved IFS stellar kinematics provide
robust measurements of the spin parameter λe and enable us to examine
the relationship among λe, M∗, and galaxy environment. We find a
strong correlation between λe and M∗, where the average λe
decreases from ∼0.4 to below 0.1 with increasing mass, and the fraction
of slow rotators fslow increases from ∼10% to 90%. We show for
the first time that at fixed M∗, there are almost no trends between galaxy
spin and environment; the apparent kinematic morphology-density relation for
ETGs is therefore primarily driven by M∗ and is accounted for by the joint
correlations between M∗ and spin, and between M∗ and environment. A
possible exception is that the increased fslow at high local density
is slightly more than expected based only on these joint correlations. Our
results suggest that the physical processes responsible for building up the
present-day stellar masses of massive galaxies are also very efficient at
reducing their spin, in any environment.Comment: Accepted to MNRA