First results from the IllustrisTNG simulations: the stellar mass content of groups and clusters of galaxies
Annalisa Pillepich, Dylan Nelson, Lars Hernquist, Volker Springel,, R\"udiger Pakmor, Paul Torrey, Rainer Weinberger, Shy Genel, Jill Naiman,, Federico Marinacci, and Mark Vogelsberger

TL;DR
This paper presents initial results from the IllustrisTNG cosmological simulations, analyzing the stellar mass distribution in galaxy groups and clusters, and comparing simulation predictions with observational data.
Contribution
It introduces the TNG100 and TNG300 simulations and provides detailed analysis of stellar mass content and distribution in galaxy clusters, highlighting the relation between halo mass and stellar properties.
Findings
Rich clusters have half of stellar mass in satellites and half in the central galaxy and intra-cluster light.
Stellar mass correlates strongly with halo mass, with a power-law relation at z=0.
Simulated galaxy sizes and stellar mass profiles are tightly linked to halo mass, enabling predictions from single measurements.
Abstract
The IllustrisTNG project is a new suite of cosmological magneto-hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation performed with the Arepo code and updated models for feedback physics. Here we introduce the first two simulations of the series, TNG100 and TNG300, and quantify the stellar mass content of about 4000 massive galaxy groups and clusters () at recent times (). The richest clusters have half of their total stellar mass bound to satellite galaxies, with the other half being associated with the central galaxy and the diffuse intra-cluster light. The exact ICL fraction depends sensitively on the definition of a central galaxy's mass and varies in our most massive clusters between 20 to 40% of the total stellar mass. Haloes of and above have more diffuse stellar mass outside 100 kpc than within…
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