Reaching for the Edge I: Probing the Outskirts of Massive Galaxies with HSC, DECaLS, SDSS, and Dragonfly
Jiaxuan Li, Song Huang, Alexie Leauthaud, John Moustakas, Shany, Danieli, Jenny E. Greene, Roberto Abraham, Felipe Ardila, Erin Kado-Fong,, Deborah Lokhorst, Robert Lupton, Paul Price

TL;DR
This study compares the outer light profiles of massive galaxies across four large surveys, demonstrating consistent measurements and potential for using outer light as a low scatter indicator of dark matter halo mass.
Contribution
It provides a cross-survey comparison of galaxy outskirts, validating the robustness of outer light measurements and their use as halo mass proxies.
Findings
Dragonfly offers the best control of systematics at low redshift.
HSC and DECaLS profiles agree well at large radii.
Outer light measurements correlate with halo mass via weak lensing.
Abstract
The outer light (stellar halos) of massive galaxies has recently emerged as a possible low scatter tracer of dark matter halo mass. To test the robustness of outer light measurements across different data sets, we compare the surface brightness profiles of massive galaxies using four independent data sets: the Hyper Suprime-Cam survey (HSC), the Dark Energy Camera Legacy Survey (DECaLS), the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), and the Dragonfly Wide Field Survey (Dragonfly). We use customized pipelines for HSC and DECaLS to achieve better sky background subtraction. For galaxies at , Dragonfly has the best control of systematics, reaching surface brightness levels of mag/arcsec. At , HSC can reliably recover surface brightness profiles to mag/arcsec reaching kpc. DECaLS surface brightness profiles show good…
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