Luminous Red Galaxies in Clusters: Central Occupation, Spatial Distributions, and Mis-centering
Hanako Hoshino, Alexie Leauthaud, Claire Lackner, Chiaki Hikage,, Eduardo Rozo, Eli Rykoff, Rachel Mandelbaum, Surhud More, Anupreeta More,, Shun Saito, Benedetta Vulcani

TL;DR
This study investigates how luminous red galaxies (LRGs) occupy massive dark matter halos in clusters, revealing unexpected trends such as lower central occupation than predicted and significant offsets of bright non-central LRGs from cluster centers.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of LRG central occupation, mis-centering probabilities, and radial distributions, challenging previous assumptions about LRG-halo connections.
Findings
Central occupation of LRGs is lower than clustering predictions.
Bright non-central LRGs are often offset from cluster centers.
The brightest galaxy is not always the central galaxy in clusters.
Abstract
Luminous Red Galaxies (LRG) from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey are considered among the best understood samples of galaxies, and they are employed in a broad range of cosmological studies. Because they form a relatively homogeneous population, with high stellar masses and red colors, they are expected to occupy halos in a relatively simple way. In this paper, we study how LRGs occupy massive halos via direct counts in clusters and we reveal several unexpected trends suggesting that the connection between LRGs and dark matter halos may not be straightforward. Using the redMaPPer cluster catalog, we derive the central occupation of LRGs as a function richness, Ncen({\lambda}). Assuming no correlation between cluster mass and central galaxy luminosity at fixed richness, we show that clusters contain a significantly lower fraction of central LRGs than predicted from the two-point correlation…
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