Constraints on the relationship between stellar mass and halo mass at low and high redshift
Benjamin P. Moster (MPIA), Rachel S. Somerville (STScI), Christian, Maulbetsch (MPIA), Frank C. van den Bosch (MPIA), Andrea V. Maccio' (MPIA),, Thorsten Naab (USM, Munich), Ludwig Oser (USM, Munich)

TL;DR
This paper models the relationship between galaxy stellar mass and dark matter halo mass across different redshifts, using simulations and observational data to predict galaxy clustering and bias evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a parameterized SHM relation that fits multiple observational constraints and predicts galaxy clustering and bias at various redshifts.
Findings
SHM relation varies with redshift, especially for low-mass halos.
Predicted galaxy bias increases with stellar mass and redshift.
Model aligns well with observed galaxy clustering and lensing data.
Abstract
We use a statistical approach to determine the relationship between the stellar masses of galaxies and the masses of the dark matter halos in which they reside. We obtain a parameterized stellar-to-halo mass (SHM) relation by populating halos and subhalos in an N-body simulation with galaxies and requiring that the observed stellar mass function be reproduced. We find good agreement with constraints from galaxy-galaxy lensing and predictions of semi-analytic models. Using this mapping, and the positions of the halos and subhalos obtained from the simulation, we find that our model predictions for the galaxy two-point correlation function (CF) as a function of stellar mass are in excellent agreement with the observed clustering properties in the SDSS at z=0. We show that the clustering data do not provide additional strong constraints on the SHM function and conclude that our model can…
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