On the properties of compact groups identified in different photometric bands
Antonela Taverna (1), Eugenia Diaz-Gimenez (1,2), Ariel Zandivarez, (1,2), Francisco Joray (3), Maria Jose Kanagusuku (1) ((1) IATE-CONICET-UNC,, (2) OAC-UNC, (3) FaMAF-UNC. Cordoba, Argentina)

TL;DR
This study compares properties of compact galaxy groups identified in different photometric bands using mock data, revealing how band choice influences observed group characteristics and emphasizing careful sample selection.
Contribution
It provides a systematic comparison of compact groups across K, r, and u bands using a mock lightcone, highlighting band-dependent differences in group properties and the importance of selection criteria.
Findings
u-band groups are smallest in projection
K-band groups have the largest brightness difference between top galaxies
r-band groups are the least compact
Abstract
Historically, compact group catalogues vary not only in their identification algorithms and selection functions, but also in their photometric bands. Differences between compact group catalogues have been reported. However, it is difficult to assess the impact of the photometric band in these differences given the variety of identification algorithms. We used the mock lightcone built by Henriques et al. (2012) to identify and compare compact groups in three different photometric bands: , , and . We applied the same selection functions in the three bands, and found that compact groups in the u-band look the smallest in projection, the difference between the two brightest galaxies is the largest in the K-band, while compact groups in the r-band present the lowest compactness. We also investigated the differences between samples when galaxies are selected only in one particular…
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.
