The Growth of Brightest Cluster Galaxies and Intracluster Light Over the Past Ten Billion Years
Tahlia DeMaio, Anthony H. Gonzalez, Ann Zabludoff, Dennis Zaritsky,, Greg Aldering, Mark Brodwin, Thomas Connor, Megan Donahue, Brian Hayden, John, S. Mulchaey, Saul Perlmutter, and S. A. Stanford

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of brightest cluster galaxies and intracluster light over ten billion years, revealing significant growth in stellar mass within the central regions and evidence for inside-out assembly, contrasting with the slower overall cluster mass growth.
Contribution
It provides empirical measurements of BCG+ICL stellar mass growth across redshifts and demonstrates that stellar mass growth exceeds cluster mass increase, supporting inside-out growth models.
Findings
BCG+ICL stellar mass increases by a factor of 3.8 from z=1.55 to z=0.40.
Stellar mass within 10-100 kpc grows more rapidly than the overall cluster mass.
Concentration of stellar mass decreases with increasing cluster mass, indicating inside-out growth.
Abstract
We constrain the evolution of the brightest cluster galaxy plus intracluster light (BCG+ICL) using an ensemble of 42 galaxy groups and clusters that span redshifts of z = 0.05-1.75 and masses of M Specifically, we measure the relationship between the BCG+ICL stellar mass and at projected radii 10 < r < 100 kpc for three different epochs. At intermediate redshift (z = 0.40), where we have the best data, we find . Fixing the exponent of this power law for all redshifts, we constrain the normalization of this relation to be times higher at z = 0.40 than at high redshift (z = 1.55). We find no change in the relation from intermediate to low redshift (z = 0.10). In other words, for fixed , at 10 < r < 100 kpc increases from z = 1.55 to z = 0.40 and not…
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