Tracing Dark Matter Halos with Satellite Kinematics and the Central Stellar Velocity Dispersion of Galaxies
Gangil Seo, Jubee Sohn, Myung Gyoon Lee

TL;DR
This study confirms that the central stellar velocity dispersion of galaxies is a reliable indicator of their dark matter halo mass, using satellite kinematics from SDSS data.
Contribution
It provides empirical relations linking galaxy velocity dispersion to dark matter halo mass, validating the dispersion as a robust halo mass tracer.
Findings
Central velocity dispersion correlates tightly with satellite system velocity dispersion.
The relation between primary galaxy velocity dispersion and halo mass is linear for red galaxies.
Satellite kinematics effectively trace dark matter halo mass across galaxy types.
Abstract
It has been suggested that the central stellar velocity dispersion of galaxies can trace dark matter halo mass directly. We test this hypothesis using a complete spectroscopic sample of isolated galaxies surrounded by faint satellite galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 12. We apply a friends-of-friends algorithm with projected linking length kpc and radial velocity linking length km s to construct our sample. Our sample includes 2807 isolated galaxies with 3417 satellite galaxies at . We divide the sample into two groups based on the primary galaxy color: red and blue primary galaxies separated at . The central stellar velocity dispersions of the primary galaxies are proportional to the luminosities and stellar masses of the same galaxies. Stacking the sample based on the central velocity…
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