Connecting SDSS central galaxies to their host halos using total satellite luminosity
Mehmet Alpaslan, Jeremy L. Tinker

TL;DR
This study uses satellite galaxy luminosity from SDSS and DESI data to explore its relationship with galaxy properties, revealing correlations with dark matter halo characteristics and environmental factors, advancing understanding of galaxy-halo connections.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of satellite luminosity as a probe for dark matter halo properties, including halo formation history and environment, for a large galaxy sample.
Findings
L$_{sat}$ correlates more strongly with r-band magnitude than stellar mass.
Halo age influences galaxy properties in star-forming centrals.
Environmental effects differ between star-forming and quiescent galaxies.
Abstract
The total luminosity of satellite galaxies around a central galaxy, L, is a powerful metric for probing dark matter halos. In this paper we use data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and DESI Legacy Imaging Surveys to explore the relationship between L and various observable galaxy properties for a sample of 117,966 central galaxies out to . At fixed stellar mass, every galaxy property we explore shows a correlation with L. This implies that dark matter halos play a possibly significant role in determining these secondary galaxy properties. We quantify these correlations by computing the mutual information between L and secondary properties and explore how this mutual information varies as a function of stellar mass and when separating the sample into star-forming and quiescent central galaxies. We find that absolute r-band magnitude correlates…
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