Virial scaling of galaxies in clusters: bright to faint is cool to hot
Hao-Yi Wu, Oliver Hahn, August E. Evrard, Risa H. Wechsler, Klaus, Dolag

TL;DR
This study combines simulations to analyze galaxy velocity behaviors in clusters, revealing brightness-dependent velocity trends and biases in mass estimates, with implications for observational analysis.
Contribution
It provides a consistent simulation-based analysis of galaxy velocities in clusters, highlighting the impact of galaxy brightness and modeling methods on velocity dispersion measurements.
Findings
Brightest satellites are slightly cooler than dark matter.
Fainter satellites are hotter than dark matter.
Velocity dispersion bias is about 10-15% for the 100 brightest galaxies.
Abstract
By combining galaxy tracers from high-resolution N-body and hydrodynamical simulations, we present a consistent picture of the behaviour of galaxy velocities in massive clusters. In haloes above ~ 10^14 Msun, the brightest satellite galaxies are slightly cooler compared to the dark matter, while fainter satellites are hotter. Within the virial radius of a cluster, the mean velocity dispersion based on the 100 brightest galaxies is a factor of 1.065 +/- 0.005 (stat) +/- 0.027 (sys) higher than that of the dark matter (corresponding to a ~10-15 per cent bias in the dynamical mass estimate) while that based on only the five brightest galaxies is 0.868 +/- 0.039 (stat) +/- 0.035 (sys). These trends are approximately independent of redshift. The velocity structure is sensitive to the modelling of galaxies in clusters, indicative of the complex interplay of tidal stripping, dynamical…
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.
