CFHTLenS: The relation between galaxy dark matter haloes and baryons from weak gravitational lensing
Malin Velander, Edo van Uitert, Henk Hoekstra, Jean Coupon, Thomas, Erben, Catherine Heymans, Hendrik Hildebrandt, Thomas D. Kitching, Yannick, Mellier, Lance Miller, Ludovic Van Waerbeke, Christopher Bonnett, Liping Fu,, Stefania Giodini, Michael J. Hudson, Konrad Kuijken

TL;DR
This study uses weak gravitational lensing data from CFHTLenS to analyze the relationship between galaxy dark matter halo mass and baryonic content, revealing differences between red and blue galaxies and their environments.
Contribution
It provides new empirical constraints on the halo mass-baryonic content relation for different galaxy types using a large lensing survey.
Findings
Red galaxies have higher halo mass normalization than blue galaxies.
Red galaxy satellites decrease with increasing luminosity and stellar mass.
Blue galaxies are generally in less clustered, more isolated environments.
Abstract
We present a study of the relation between dark matter halo mass and the baryonic content of host galaxies, quantified via luminosity and stellar mass. Our investigation uses 154 deg2 of Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS) lensing and photometric data, obtained from the CFHT Legacy Survey. We employ a galaxy-galaxy lensing halo model which allows us to constrain the halo mass and the satellite fraction. Our analysis is limited to lenses at redshifts between 0.2 and 0.4. We express the relationship between halo mass and baryonic observable as a power law. For the luminosity-halo mass relation we find a slope of 1.32+/-0.06 and a normalisation of 1.19+0.06-0.07x10^13 h70^-1 Msun for red galaxies, while for blue galaxies the best-fit slope is 1.09+0.20-0.13 and the normalisation is 0.18+0.04-0.05x10^13 h70^-1 Msun. Similarly, we find a best-fit slope of 1.36+0.06-0.07…
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