Dark matter halo properties of GAMA galaxy groups from 100 square degrees of KiDS weak lensing data
M. Viola, M. Cacciato, M. Brouwer, K. Kuijken, H. Hoekstra, P., Norberg, A.S.G. Robotham, E. van Uitert, M. Alpaslan, I.K. Baldry, A. Choi,, J.T.A. de Jong, S.P. Driver, T. Erben, A. Grado, Alister W. Graham, C., Heymans, H. Hildebrandt, A.M. Hopkins, N. Irisarri, B. Joachimi

TL;DR
This study uses KiDS weak lensing data to measure dark matter halo properties of GAMA galaxy groups, confirming NFW profiles, constraining mass-observable relations, and testing baryonic feedback models.
Contribution
First weak lensing analysis of GAMA groups with KiDS data, providing detailed halo profiles, scaling relations, and feedback model constraints.
Findings
Halo density profiles follow NFW predictions.
Mass scales with luminosity and velocity dispersion.
Models without AGN feedback are inconsistent with observations.
Abstract
The Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) is an optical wide-field survey designed to map the matter distribution in the Universe using weak gravitational lensing. In this paper, we use these data to measure the density profiles and masses of a sample of spectroscopically identified galaxy groups and clusters from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. We detect a highly significant signal (signal-to-noise-ratio 120), allowing us to study the properties of dark matter haloes over one and a half order of magnitude in mass, from . We interpret the results for various subsamples of groups using a halo model framework which accounts for the mis-centring of the Brightest Cluster Galaxy (used as the tracer of the group centre) with respect to the centre of the group's dark matter halo. We find that the density profiles of…
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