We apply detailed observations of the Color-Magnitude Relation (CMR) with the
ACS/HST to study galaxy evolution in eight clusters at z~1. The early-type red
sequence is well defined and elliptical and lenticular galaxies lie on similar
CMRs. We analyze CMR parameters as a function of redshift, galaxy properties
and cluster mass. For bright galaxies (M_B < -21mag), the CMR scatter of the
elliptical population in cluster cores is smaller than that of the S0
population, although the two become similar at faint magnitudes. While the
bright S0 population consistently shows larger scatter than the ellipticals,
the scatter of the latter increases in the peripheral cluster regions. If we
interpret these results as due to age differences, bright elliptical galaxies
in cluster cores are on average older than S0 galaxies and peripheral
elliptical galaxies (by about 0.5Gyr). CMR zero point, slope, and scatter in
the (U-B)_z=0 rest-frame show no significant evolution out to redshift z~1.3
nor significant dependence on cluster mass. Two of our clusters display CMR
zero points that are redder (by ~2sigma) than the average (U-B)_z=0 of our
sample. We also analyze the fraction of morphological early-type and late-type
galaxies on the red sequence. We find that, while in the majority of the
clusters most (80% to 90%) of the CMR population is composed of early-type
galaxies, in the highest redshift, low mass cluster of our sample, the CMR
late-type/early-type fractions are similar (~50%), with most of the late-type
population composed of galaxies classified as S0/a. This trend is not
correlated with the cluster's X-ray luminosity, nor with its velocity
dispersion, and could be a real evolution with redshift.Comment: ApJ, in press, 27 pages, 22 figure