Testing a simple recipe for estimating galaxy masses from minimal observational data
N. Lyskova, E. Churazov, I.Zhuravleva, T. Naab, L. Oser, O. Gerhard,, X. Wu

TL;DR
This paper evaluates a simple, observationally minimal method for estimating galaxy mass profiles using simulations, demonstrating its high accuracy and robustness across different galaxy types and redshifts, with potential for practical survey applications.
Contribution
It introduces and tests a straightforward mass estimation technique based on optical brightness and velocity dispersion, validated against cosmological simulations across various galaxy masses and redshifts.
Findings
Method recovers circular speed within 1-8% accuracy.
Mass estimates are unbiased for massive galaxies at multiple redshifts.
Hydrostatic equilibrium estimates are accurate within 4-5%, with minor biases.
Abstract
The accuracy and robustness of a simple method to estimate the total mass profile of a galaxy is tested using a sample of 65 cosmological zoom-simulations of individual galaxies. The method only requires information on the optical surface brightness and the projected velocity dispersion profiles and therefore can be applied even in case of poor observational data. In the simulated sample massive galaxies ( ) at redshift have almost isothermal rotation curves for broad range of radii (RMS for the circular speed deviations from a constant value over ). For such galaxies the method recovers the unbiased value of the circular speed. The sample averaged deviation from the true circular speed is less than with the scatter of (RMS) up to . Circular speed estimates of…
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