Infall of galaxies onto groups
M. V. Santucho, M. L. Ceccarelli, D. G. Lambas

TL;DR
This study investigates galaxy infall patterns onto groups using observational peculiar velocity data and simulations, revealing mass-dependent infall velocities and environmental effects consistent with theoretical models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed observational analysis of galaxy infall velocities onto groups, accounting for distance uncertainties and environmental influences, validated by simulations.
Findings
Infall velocities range from 200 to 400 km/s beyond virial radii.
Infall velocity amplitude increases with group mass.
Observational results agree with mock catalog predictions.
Abstract
Growth of the structure in the Universe manifest as accretion flows of galaxies onto groups and clusters. Thus, the present day properties of groups and their member galaxies are influenced by the characteristics of this continuous infall pattern. Several works both theoretical, in numerical simulations, and in observations, study this process and provide useful steps for a better understanding of galaxy systems and their evolution. We aim at exploring the streaming flow of galaxies onto groups using observational peculiar velocity data. The effects of distance uncertainties are also analyzed as well as the relation between the infall pattern and group and environment properties.This work deals with analysis of peculiar velocity data and their projection on the direction to group centers, to determine the mean galaxy infall flow. We applied this analysis to the galaxies and groups…
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