Satellite Kinematics I: A New Method to Constrain the Halo Mass-Luminosity Relation of Central Galaxies
Surhud More, Frank C. van den Bosch, Marcello Cacciato

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new analytical framework and technique to accurately determine the halo mass-luminosity relation of central galaxies using satellite kinematics, accounting for scatter and selection effects.
Contribution
It presents a novel method involving dual weighting schemes to break degeneracy caused by scatter in the halo mass-luminosity relation.
Findings
Velocity dispersion ratio depends on scatter in the relation.
The method can infer the mass-luminosity relation accurately.
Analytical framework accounts for selection effects.
Abstract
Satellite kinematics can be used to probe the masses of dark matter haloes of central galaxies. In order to measure the kinematics with sufficient signal-to-noise, one uses the satellite galaxies of a large number of central galaxies stacked according to similar properties (e.g., luminosity). However, in general the relation between the luminosity of a central galaxy and the mass of its host halo will have non-zero scatter. Consequently, this stacking results in combining the kinematics of satellite galaxies in haloes of different masses, which complicates the interpretation of the data. In this paper we present an analytical framework to model satellite kinematics, properly accounting for this scatter and for various selection effects. We show that in the presence of scatter in the halo mass-luminosity relation, the commonly used velocity dispersion of satellite galaxies can not be…
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