The Baryonic Collapse Efficiency of Galaxy Groups in the RESOLVE and ECO Surveys
Kathleen D. Eckert, Sheila J. Kannappan, Claudia del P. Lagos, Ashley, D. Baker, Andreas A. Berlind, David V. Stark, Amanda J. Moffett, Zachary, Nasipak, and Mark A. Norris

TL;DR
This study analyzes the baryonic mass functions and collapse efficiencies of galaxy groups in the local universe using observational data and models, revealing insights into feedback processes and gas content in different halo mass regimes.
Contribution
It compares observed group baryonic mass functions with semi-analytic models, highlighting discrepancies and the role of hot halo gas in baryonic collapse efficiency.
Findings
Group SMF and CBMF decline steeply at high masses.
Baryonic collapse efficiency peaks at halo masses ~10^11.4-12 Msun.
Feedback strength varies with halo mass, affecting gas content.
Abstract
We examine the z = 0 group-integrated stellar and cold baryonic (stars + cold atomic gas) mass functions (group SMF and CBMF) and the baryonic collapse efficiency (group cold baryonic to dark matter halo mass ratio) using the RESOLVE and ECO survey galaxy group catalogs and a galform semi-analytic model (SAM) mock catalog. The group SMF and CBMF fall off more steeply at high masses and rise with a shallower low-mass slope than the theoretical halo mass function (HMF). The transition occurs at group-integrated cold baryonic mass M_coldbary ~ 10^11 Msun. The SAM, however, has significantly fewer groups at the transition mass ~ 10^11 Msun and a steeper low-mass slope than the data, suggesting that feedback is too weak in low-mass halos and conversely too strong near the transition mass. Using literature prescriptions to include hot halo gas and potential unobservable galaxy gas produces a…
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