Unions with UNIONS: Using galaxy-galaxy lensing to probe galaxy mergers
Isaac Cheng, Jack Elvin-Poole, Michael J. Hudson, Ruxin Barr\'e, Sara L. Ellison, Robert W. Bickley, Thomas J. L. de Boer, S\'ebastien Fabbro, Leonardo Ferreira, Sacha Guerrini, Hendrik Hildebrandt, Martin Kilbinger, Alan W. McConnachie, Ludovic van Waerbeke, Anna Wittje

TL;DR
This study uses galaxy-galaxy lensing to compare dark matter halos and stellar content of post-merger and non-merging galaxies, finding no significant differences with current data but setting constraints on merger-induced starbursts.
Contribution
First application of galaxy-galaxy lensing to analyze dark matter and stellar changes due to galaxy mergers, with methods scalable to future larger surveys.
Findings
No significant difference in lensing profiles between post-mergers and controls.
Halo masses around 4×10^{12} solar masses for both samples.
Rules out merger-induced starbursts forming over 60% of stellar mass at 95% confidence.
Abstract
We use galaxy-galaxy lensing to investigate how the dark matter (DM) haloes and stellar content of galaxies with and change as a result of the merger process. To this end, we construct two samples of galaxies obtained from the Ultraviolet Near Infrared Optical Northern Survey (UNIONS), comprising 1 623 post-mergers and 30 000 non-merging controls, that live in low-density environments to use as our lenses. These samples are weighted to share the same distributions of stellar mass, redshift, and geometric mean distance to a galaxy's three nearest neighbours to ensure differences in the lensing signal are due to the merger process itself. We do not detect a statistically significant difference in the excess surface density profile of post-mergers and non-merging controls with current data. Fitting haloes…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGerman Economic Analysis & Policies · Economic, financial, and policy analysis · Economic Growth and Productivity
