An empirical measurement of the Halo Mass Function from the combination of GAMA DR4, SDSS DR12, and REFLEX II data
Simon P. Driver, Aaron S. G. Robotham, Danail Obreschkow, John A., Peacock, Ivan K. Baldry, Sabine Bellstedt, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Sarah Brough,, Michelle Cluver, Benne W. Holwerda, Andrew Hopkins, Claudia Lagos, Jochen, Liske, Jon Loveday, Steven Phillipps, Edward N. Taylor

TL;DR
This study empirically measures the halo mass function across a broad mass range using combined galaxy survey data, confirming consistency with LambdaCDM and providing detailed parameter fits.
Contribution
It extends the measured halo mass function to lower masses by an order of magnitude and combines multiple surveys for a comprehensive analysis.
Findings
Good agreement with LambdaCDM expectations.
Extended mass range measurement of the HMF.
Fitted a four-parameter Murray-Robotham-Power function.
Abstract
We construct the halo mass function (HMF) from the GAMA galaxy group catalogue over the mass range 10^12.7M_sol to 10^15.5M_sol, and find good agreement with the expectation from LambdaCDM. In comparison to previous studies, this result extends the mass range over which the HMF has now been measured over by an order of magnitude. We combine the GAMA DR4 HMF with similar data from the SDSS DR12 and REFLEX II surveys, and fit a four-parameter Murray-Robotham-Power (MRP) function, valid at z~0.1, yielding: a density normalisation of: log10 (phi Mpc^3)=-3.96[+0.55,-0.82], a high mass turn-over of: log10(M/M_sol)=14.13[+0.43,-0.40], a low mass power law slope of: alpha=-1.68[+0.21,-0.24] , and a high mass softening parameter of: beta= 0.63[+0.25,-0.11]. If we fold in the constraint on Omega_M from Planck 2018 Cosmology, we are able to reduce these uncertainties further, but this relies on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
