Dynamical difference between the cD galaxy and the stellar diffuse component in simulated galaxy clusters
K. Dolag, G. Murante, S. Borgani

TL;DR
This study introduces a dynamical method to distinguish between the central cD galaxy and the diffuse stellar component in simulated galaxy clusters, revealing their distinct properties and formation histories.
Contribution
The paper presents a new dynamical algorithm for separating cD and diffuse stellar components in simulations, improving physical understanding over previous methods.
Findings
The two stellar components have distinct spatial and velocity distributions.
The diffuse stellar component fraction is independent of cluster mass.
The DSC fraction is sensitive to the cluster's formation history.
Abstract
Member galaxies within galaxy clusters nowadays can be routinely identified in cosmological, hydrodynamical simulations using methods based on identifying self bound, locally over dense substructures. However, distinguishing the central galaxy from the stellar diffuse component within clusters is notoriously difficult, and in the center it is not even clear if two distinct stellar populations exist. Here, after subtracting all member galaxies, we use the velocity distribution of the remaining stars and detect two dynamically, well-distinct stellar components within simulated galaxy clusters. These differences in the dynamics can be used to apply an un-binding procedure which leads to a spatial separation of the two components into a cD and a diffuse stellar component (DSC). Applying our new algorithm to a cosmological, hydrodynamical simulation we find that -- in line with previous…
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