| Mass growth and mergers: direct observations of the luminosity function of LRG satellite galaxies out to z=0.7 | |||||
with D. Wake and P. van Dokkum (Yale U.) | |||||
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We study the projected radial distribution of satellite galaxies around more than 28,000 Luminous Red Galaxies (LRGs) at z=0.34 and trace the gravitational potential of LRG groups in the range 7<r/kpc<700. We show that at large radii the satellite number density profile is well fitted by a projected NFW profile with r_s~270 kpc and that at small radii this model underestimates the number of satellite galaxies. Utilizing the previously measured stellar light distribution of LRGs from deep imaging stacks we demonstrate that this small scale excess is consistent with a non-negligible baryonic mass contribution to the gravitational potential of massive groups and clusters. The combined NFW+scaled stellar profile provides an excellent fit to the satellite number density profile all the way from 15 kpc to 700 kpc. Dark matter dominates the total mass profile of LRG halos at r>25 kpc whereas baryons account for more than 50% of the mass at smaller radii. We calculate the total dark-to-baryonic mass ratio and show that it is consistent with measurements from weak lensing for environments dominated by massive early type galaxies. Finally, we divide the satellite galaxies in our sample into three luminosity bins and show that the satellite light profiles of all brightness levels are consistent with each other outside of roughly 25 kpc. At smaller radii we find evidence for a mild mass segregation with an increasing fraction of bright satellites close to the central LRG. |
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| Mass growth and mergers: direct observations of the luminosity function of LRG satellite galaxies out to z=0.7 | |||||
with D. Wake, P. van Dokkum, F. van den Bosch (Yale U.), D. Schneider (Penn State), J. Brinkmann (Apache Point) and B. Weaver (NYU) | |||||
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We present a statistical study of the luminosity functions of galaxies surrounding luminous red galaxies (LRGs) at average redshifts z=0.34 and z=0.65. The luminosity functions are derived by extracting source photometry around the LRGs and subtracting foreground and background contamination using randomly selected control fields. We show that at both studied redshifts the average luminosity functions of the LRGs and their satellite galaxies are poorly fitted by a Schechter function due to a luminosity gap between the centrals and their most luminous satellites. We utilize a two-component fit of a Schechter function plus a log-normal distribution to demonstrate that LRGs are typically brighter than their most luminous satellite by roughly 1.3 magnitudes. This luminosity gap implies that interactions within LRG environments are typically restricted to minor mergers with mass ratios of 1:4 or lower. The luminosity functions further imply that roughly 35% of the mass in the environment is locked in the LRG itself, supporting the idea that mass growth through major mergers within the environment is unlikely. Lastly, we show that the luminosity gap may be at least partially explained by the selection of LRGs as the gap can be reproduced by sparsely sampling a Schechter function. In that case LRGs may represent only a small fraction of central galaxies in similar mass halos. |
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| The faint stellar halos of red massive galaxies | |||||
with P. van Dokkum (Yale U.) | |||||
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We study the properties of massive galaxies at an average redshift of z~0.34 through stacking more than 42000 images of Luminous Red Galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. This is the largest dataset ever used for such an analysis and it allows us to explore the outskirts of massive red galaxies at unprecedented physical scales. Our image stacks extend farther than 400 kpc, where the r-band profile surface brightness reaches 30 mag arcsec-2. This analysis confirms that the stellar bodies of luminous red galaxies follow a simple Sérsic profile out to 100 kpc. At larger radii the profiles deviate from the best-fit Sérsic models and exhibit extra light in the r, i and z-band stacks. This excess light can probably be attributed to unresolved intragroup or intracluster light, unmasked faint galaxies associated with the LRG or a change in the light profile itself. We further show that standard analyses of SDSS-depth images typically miss 20% of the total stellar light and underestimate the size of LRGs by 10% compared to our best fit r-band Sérsic model of n=5.5 and re=11.7 kpc. In addition we study the radially dependent stack ellipticity and find an increase with radius from e=0.25 at r=10 kpc to e=0.3 at r=100 kpc. This provides support that the stellar light that we trace out to at least 100 kpc is physically associated with the galaxies themselves and may confirm that the halos of individual LRGs have higher ellipticities than their central parts. Lastly we show that the broadband color gradients of the stacked images are flat beyond roughly 40 kpc, suggesting that the stellar populations do not vary significantly with radius in the outer parts of massive ellipticals. |
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| The frequency of tidal features in nearby elliptical galaxies | |||||
with P. van Dokkum, J. Nelan, R. Bezanson (Yale U.) | |||||
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We present a deep broadband optical imaging study of a complete sample of luminous elliptical galaxies (MV<-20) at distances 15 Mpc - 50 Mpc, selected from the Tully catalog of nearby galaxies. The images are flat to ~0.35% across the 20' field and reach a depth of 27.7 mag arcsec-2. We derive an objective tidal interaction parameter for all galaxies and find that 73% of them show tidal disturbance signatures in their stellar bodies. This is the first time that such an analysis is done on a statistically complete sample and it confirms that tidal features in ellipticals are common even in the local Universe. From the dynamical time of the sample galaxies at the innermost radius where tidal features are detected we estimate the mass assembly rate of nearby ellipticals to be dM/M~0.2 per Gyr with large uncertainty. We explore the relation between gravitational interaction signatures and the galaxy environment and find that galaxies in clusters are less disturbed than group and field galaxies. We also study how these interactions affect the broadband colors of ellipticals and find a moderate correlation, suggesting that the mergers are not accompanied by significant star-formation. Lastly, we find no correlation between AGN activity, as measured by 6cm radio emission, and large scale tidal distortions. This implies that gravitational interactions are not the only, and perhaps not the most important, trigger of nuclear activity. In summary, we find that elliptical galaxies in groups and low density environments continue to grow at the present day through ``dry'' mergers involving little star formation. The OBEY survey |
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