Are Brightest Halo Galaxies Central Galaxies?
Ramin A. Skibba, Frank C. van den Bosch, Xiaohu Yang, Surhud More,, Houjun Mo, Fabio Fontanot

TL;DR
This study tests the assumption that the brightest galaxy in a dark matter halo is always the central galaxy and finds that a significant fraction are actually satellites, challenging a key paradigm in galaxy formation.
Contribution
The paper provides observational evidence that the brightest halo galaxy is not always the central galaxy, quantifying the fraction of satellites among brightest galaxies across different halo masses.
Findings
The brightest halo galaxy is often a satellite, not the central.
The fraction of non-central brightest galaxies increases with halo mass.
Observed fractions are higher than theoretical predictions.
Abstract
It is generally assumed that the central galaxy in a dark matter halo, that is, the galaxy with the lowest specific potential energy, is also the brightest halo galaxy (BHG), and that it resides at rest at the centre of the dark matter potential well. This central galaxy paradigm (CGP) is an essential assumption made in various fields of astronomical research. In this paper we test the validity of the CGP using a large galaxy group catalogue constructed from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. For each group we compute two statistics, and , which quantify the offsets of the line-of-sight velocities and projected positions of brightest group galaxies relative to the other group members. By comparing the cumulative distributions of and to those obtained from detailed mock group catalogues, we rule out the null-hypothesis that the CGP is correct.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
