The integrated stellar content of dark matter halos
Alexie Leauthaud, Matthew R. George, Peter S. Behroozi, Kevin Bundy,, Jeremy Tinker, Risa H. Wechsler, Charlie Conroy, Alexis Finoguenov, Masayuki, Tanaka

TL;DR
This study measures the total stellar mass fraction in dark matter halos across a range of masses and redshifts, revealing lower values than previous estimates and highlighting the importance of systematic uncertainties.
Contribution
It introduces a combined approach using halo occupation modeling and X-ray group data to accurately determine stellar mass fractions, addressing previous overestimations.
Findings
f_star is lower than previously estimated for halos of 10^13 to 10^14 Msun.
Systematic uncertainties dominate over statistical errors in f_star measurements.
f_star+f_gas falls short of the cosmic mean, especially in lower mass halos.
Abstract
Measurements of the total amount of stars locked up in galaxies as a function of host halo mass contain key clues about the efficiency of processes that regulate star formation. We derive the total stellar mass fraction f_star as a function of halo mass M500c from z=0.2 to z=1 using two complementary methods. First, we derive f_star using a statistical Halo Occupation Distribution model jointly constrained by data from lensing, clustering, and the stellar mass function. This method enables us to probe f_star over a much wider halo mass range than with group or cluster catalogs. Second, we derive f_star at group scales using a COSMOS X-ray group catalog and we show that the two methods agree to within 30%. We quantify the systematic uncertainty on f_star using abundance matching methods and we show that the statistical uncertainty on f_star (~10%) is dwarfed by systematic uncertainties…
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