Weak Gravitational Lensing around Low Surface Brightness Galaxies in the DES Year 3 Data
N. Chicoine, J. Prat, G. Zacharegkas, C. Chang, D. Tanoglidis, A., Drlica-Wagner, D. Anbajagane, S. Adhikari, A. Amon, R.H. Wechsler, A., Alarcon, K. Bechtol, M.R. Becker, G.M. Bernstein, A. Campos, A. Carnero, Rosell, M. Carrasco Kind, R. Cawthon, R. Chen, A. Choi, J. Cordero

TL;DR
This study uses weak gravitational lensing in DES Year 3 data to measure the halo masses of low surface brightness galaxies, revealing their dark matter content and potential formation mechanisms.
Contribution
First application of weak lensing to estimate halo masses of LSBGs, demonstrating the method's viability for these faint, diffuse galaxies.
Findings
Red LSBGs have a host halo mass of about 10^13 solar masses.
Blue LSBGs have an upper halo mass limit below 10^12.84 solar masses.
LSBGs' stellar-to-halo mass ratio aligns with typical galaxy populations.
Abstract
We present galaxy-galaxy lensing measurements using a sample of low surface brightness galaxies (LSBGs) drawn from the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 (Y3) data as lenses. LSBGs are diffuse galaxies with a surface brightness dimmer than the ambient night sky. These dark-matter-dominated objects are intriguing due to potentially unusual formation channels that lead to their diffuse stellar component. Given the faintness of LSBGs, using standard observational techniques to characterize their total masses proves challenging. Weak gravitational lensing, which is less sensitive to the stellar component of galaxies, could be a promising avenue to estimate the masses of LSBGs. Our LSBG sample consists of 23,790 galaxies separated into red and blue color types at and , respectively. Combined with the DES Y3 shear catalog, we measure the tangential shear around these LSBGs and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
