The radial distribution of galaxies in groups and clusters
J.M. Budzynski, S.Koposov, I.G. McCarthy, S.L. McGee, V. Belokurov

TL;DR
This study analyzes galaxy distribution in groups and clusters, revealing that galaxy profiles follow a projected NFW profile with lower concentration than dark matter, and compares observations with galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides a new catalogue of galaxy groups/clusters, measures their galaxy density profiles, and compares these with theoretical models to understand galaxy distribution and formation.
Findings
Galaxy profiles fit a projected NFW profile with concentration ~2.6.
Galaxy and dark matter distributions are self-similar despite shape differences.
Models match satellite profiles beyond 0.3 r_500 but are sensitive to merger timescale assumptions within this radius.
Abstract
We present a new catalogue of 55,121 groups and clusters centred on Luminous Red Galaxies from SDSS DR7 in the redshift range 0.15<z<0.4. We provide halo mass estimates for each of these groups derived from a calibration between the optical richness of bright galaxies (M_r<-20.5) within 1 Mpc, and X-ray-derived mass for a small subset of 129 groups and clusters with X-ray measurements. We derive the mean (stacked) surface number density profiles of galaxies as a function of total halo mass in different mass bins. We find that derived profiles can be well-described by a projected NFW profile with a concentration parameter (<c>~2.6) that is approximately a factor of two lower than that of the dark matter (as predicted by N-body cosmological simulations) and nearly independent of halo mass. Interestingly, in spite of the difference in shape between the galaxy and dark matter radial…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
