Compact groups in theory and practice - I. The spatial properties of compact groups
Alan W. McConnachie, Sara L. Ellison, David R. Patton

TL;DR
This study uses mock galaxy catalogues from simulations to analyze the true spatial properties of compact galaxy groups, revealing their physical density, association with dark matter halos, and implications for mass estimation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the intrinsic spatial properties of compact galaxy groups using simulated data, highlighting the prevalence of genuine groups and their dark matter halo associations.
Findings
Approximately 30% of identified groups are physically dense with no interlopers.
Increasing surface brightness criteria raises the fraction of genuine groups from 29% to 75%.
More than half of genuine groups are embedded within a single dark matter halo.
Abstract
We use a mock galaxy catalogue based upon the Millennium Run simulation to investigate the intrinsic spatial properties of compact groups of galaxies. We find that approximately 30% of galaxy associations identified in our mock catalogue are physically dense systems of four or more galaxies with no interlopers, approximately half are close associations of 2, 3 or 4 galaxies with one or more interlopers, and the remainder are not physically dense. Genuine compact groups are preferentially brighter and more isolated than those with interlopers; by increasing the required minimum surface brightness of a group from the canonical value of 26mags/arcsec^2 to 22mags/arcsec^2, we can increase the proportion of genuinely compact systems identified with no interlopers from 29% to 75%. Of the genuine compact groups identified, more than half consist of a single dark matter halo with all the member…
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