Compact groups from the Millennium Simulations: I. Their Nature and the completeness of the Hickson sample
Eugenia Diaz-Gimenez (1), Gary Mamon (2,3) ((1) IATE, CONICET-UNC,, Cordoba, Argentina. (2) IAP, Paris, France, (3) Astrophysics, BIPAC,, Oxford)

TL;DR
This study uses Millennium Simulation data to analyze the nature and completeness of compact galaxy groups identified by Hickson criteria, revealing that a significant fraction are physically dense and highlighting limitations of observational samples.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison between simulated and observed compact groups, assessing their physical density and the completeness of the Hickson sample using new criteria.
Findings
70-80% of simulated groups are physically dense
Hickson sample is about 8% complete within 9000 km/s
Chance alignments account for up to 40% of groups
Abstract
We identify compact groups of galaxies (CGs) within mock galaxy catalogues from the Millennium Simulation at z=0 with three semi-analytic models (SAMs) of galaxy formation. CGs are identified using the same 2D criteria as those visually applied by Hickson (1982) to his CGs (HCGs), but with a brightest galaxy magnitude limit, and the blending of close projected pairs. Half of the mock CGs identified in projection contain at least 4 accordant velocities (mvCGs), versus 70% for HCGs. In comparison to mvCGs, the HCGs are only 8% complete at distances < 9000 km/s, missing the CGs with small angular sizes, a strongly dominant galaxy, and (for one SAM) the CGs that are fainter and those with lower surface brightness. We explore different ways to determine the fraction of physically dense groups. Binding energy criteria turn out to be inapplicable given the segregation between galaxies and dark…
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