38 research outputs found

    Evolution of the luminosity-to-halo mass relation of LRGs from a combined SDSS-DR10+RCS2 analysis

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    We study the evolution of the luminosity-to-halo mass relation of Luminous Red Galaxies (LRGs). We select a sample of 52 000 LOWZ and CMASS LRGs from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) SDSS-DR10 in the ~450 deg^2 that overlaps with imaging data from the second Red-sequence Cluster Survey (RCS2), group them into bins of absolute magnitude and redshift and measure their weak lensing signals. The source redshift distribution has a median of 0.7, which allows us to study the lensing signal as a function of lens redshift. We interpret the lensing signal using a halo model, from which we obtain the halo masses as well as the normalisations of the mass-concentration relations. We find that the concentration of haloes that host LRGs is consistent with dark matter only simulations once we allow for miscentering or satellites in the modelling. The slope of the luminosity-to-halo mass relation has a typical value of 1.4 and does not change with redshift, but we do find evidence for a change in amplitude: the average halo mass of LOWZ galaxies increases by 25_{-14}^{+16} % between z=0.36 and 0.22 to an average value of 6.43+/-0.52 x 10^13 h70^-1 Msun. If we extend the redshift range using the CMASS galaxies and assume that they are the progenitors of the LOWZ sample, we find that the average mass of LRGs increases by 80^{+39}_{-28} % between z=0.6 and 0.2Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    CFHTLenS: Co-evolution of galaxies and their dark matter haloes

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    Galaxy-galaxy weak lensing is a direct probe of the mean matter distribution around galaxies. The depth and sky coverage of the CFHT Legacy Survey yield statistically significant galaxy halo mass measurements over a much wider range of stellar masses (108.7510^{8.75} to 1011.3M10^{11.3} M_{\odot}) and redshifts (0.2<z<0.80.2 < z < 0.8) than previous weak lensing studies. At redshift z0.5z \sim 0.5, the stellar-to-halo mass ratio (SHMR) reaches a maximum of 4.0±0.24.0\pm0.2 percent as a function of halo mass at 1012.25M\sim 10^{12.25} M_{\odot}. We find, for the first time from weak lensing alone, evidence for significant evolution in the SHMR: the peak ratio falls as a function of cosmic time from 4.5±0.34.5 \pm 0.3 percent at z0.7z \sim 0.7 to 3.4±0.23.4 \pm 0.2 percent at z0.3z \sim 0.3, and shifts to lower stellar mass haloes. These evolutionary trends are dominated by red galaxies, and are consistent with a model in which the stellar mass above which star formation is quenched "downsizes" with cosmic time. In contrast, the SHMR of blue, star-forming galaxies is well-fit by a power law that does not evolve with time. This suggests that blue galaxies form stars at a rate that is balanced with their dark matter accretion in such a way that they evolve along the SHMR locus. The redshift dependence of the SHMR can be used to constrain the evolution of the galaxy population over cosmic time.Comment: 18 pages, MNRAS, in pres

    CFHTLenS: Weak lensing constraints on the ellipticity of galaxy-scale matter haloes and the galaxy-halo misalignment

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    We present weak lensing constraints on the ellipticity of galaxy-scale matter haloes and the galaxy-halo misalignment. Using data from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS), we measure the weighted-average ratio of the aligned projected ellipticity components of galaxy matter haloes and their embedded galaxies, fhf_\mathrm{h}, split by galaxy type. We then compare our observations to measurements taken from the Millennium Simulation, assuming different models of galaxy-halo misalignment. Using the Millennium Simulation we verify that the statistical estimator used removes contamination from cosmic shear. We also detect an additional signal in the simulation, which we interpret as the impact of intrinsic shape-shear alignments between the lenses and their large-scale structure environment. These alignments are likely to have caused some of the previous observational constraints on fhf_\mathrm{h} to be biased high. From CFHTLenS we find fh=0.04±0.25f_\mathrm{h}=-0.04 \pm 0.25 for early-type galaxies, which is consistent with current models for the galaxy-halo misalignment predicting fh0.20f_\mathrm{h}\simeq 0.20. For late-type galaxies we measure fh=0.690.36+0.37f_\mathrm{h}=0.69_{-0.36}^{+0.37} from CFHTLenS. This can be compared to the simulated results which yield fh0.02f_\mathrm{h}\simeq 0.02 for misaligned late-type models.Comment: 21 pages, 3 tables, 9 figures. This replacement matches the version accepted for publication in MNRA

    Effects of large-scale structure on the accuracy of weak lensing mass measurements

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    Weak gravitational lensing has become an important method to determine the masses of galaxy clusters. The intrinsic shapes of the galaxies are a dominant source of uncertainty, but there are other limitations to the precision that can be achieved. In this paper we revisit a typically ignored source of uncertainty: structure along the line-of sight. Using results from the Millennium Simulation we confirm the validity of analytical calculations that have shown that such random projections are particularly important for studies of the cluster density profile. In general the contribution of large-scale structure to the total error budget is comparable to the statistical errors. We find that the precision of the mass measurement can be improved only slightly by modelling the large-scale structure using readily available data.Comment: submitted to MNRAS; 10 pages, 8 figure

    CFHTLenS: co-evolution of galaxies and their dark matter haloes

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    Galaxy-galaxy weak lensing is a direct probe of the mean matter distribution around galaxies. The depth and sky coverage of the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey yield statistically significant galaxy halo mass measurements over a much wider range of stellar masses (108.75 to 1011.3 M⊙) and redshifts (0.2<z<0.8) than previous weak lensing studies. At redshift z∼0.5, the stellar-to-halo mass ratio (SHMR) reaches a maximum of 4.0±0.2 per cent as a function of halo mass at ∼1012.25 M⊙. We find, for the first time from weak lensing alone, evidence for significant evolution in the SHMR: the peak ratio falls as a function of cosmic time from 4.5±0.3 per cent at z∼0.7 to 3.4±0.2 per cent at z∼0.3, and shifts to lower stellar mass haloes. These evolutionary trends are dominated by red galaxies, and are consistent with a model in which the stellar mass above which star formation is quenched ‘downsizes' with cosmic time. In contrast, the SHMR of blue, star-forming galaxies is well fitted by a power law that does not evolve with time. This suggests that blue galaxies form stars at a rate that is balanced with their dark matter accretion in such a way that they evolve along the SHMR locus. The redshift dependence of the SHMR can be used to constrain the evolution of the galaxy population over cosmic tim

    CFHTLenS: weak lensing constraints on the ellipticity of galaxy-scale matter haloes and the galaxy-halo misalignment

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    We present weak lensing constraints on the ellipticity of galaxy-scale matter haloes and the galaxy-halo misalignment. Using data from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS), we measure the weighted-average ratio of the aligned projected ellipticity components of galaxy matter haloes and their embedded galaxies, fh, split by galaxy type. We then compare our observations to measurements taken from the Millennium Simulation, assuming different models of galaxy-halo misalignment. Using the Millennium Simulation, we verify that the statistical estimator used removes contamination from cosmic shear. We also detect an additional signal in the simulation, which we interpret as the impact of intrinsic shape-shear alignments between the lenses and their large-scale structure environment. These alignments are likely to have caused some of the previous observational constraints on fh to be biased high. From CFHTLenS, we find fh=−0.04±0.25 for early-type galaxies, which is consistent with current models for the galaxy-halo misalignment predicting fh ≃ 0.20. For late-type galaxies we measure fh=0.690.36+0.37f_\mathrm{h}=0.69_{-0.36}^{+0.37} from CFHTLenS. This can be compared to the simulated results which yield fh ≃ 0.02 for misaligned late-type model

    CFHTLenS: the environmental dependence of galaxy halo masses from weak lensing

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    We use weak gravitational lensing to analyse the dark matter haloes around satellite galaxies in galaxy groups in the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS) data set. This data set is derived from the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey Wide survey, and encompasses 154 deg^2 of high-quality shape data. Using the photometric redshifts, we divide the sample of lens galaxies with stellar masses in the range 10^(9)–10^(10.5) M_⊙ into those likely to lie in high-density environments (HDE) and those likely to lie in low-density environments (LDE). Through comparison with galaxy catalogues extracted from the Millennium Simulation, we show that the sample of HDE galaxies should primarily (∼61 per cent) consist of satellite galaxies in groups, while the sample of LDE galaxies should consist of mostly (∼87 per cent) non-satellite (field and central) galaxies. Comparing the lensing signals around samples of HDE and LDE galaxies matched in stellar mass, the lensing signal around HDE galaxies clearly shows a positive contribution from their host groups on their lensing signals at radii of ∼500–1000 kpc, the typical separation between satellites and group centres. More importantly, the subhaloes of HDE galaxies are less massive than those around LDE galaxies by a factor of 0.65 ± 0.12, significant at the 2.9σ level. A natural explanation is that the haloes of satellite galaxies are stripped through tidal effects in the group environment. Our results are consistent with a typical tidal truncation radius of ∼40 kpc
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