250 research outputs found

    Galaxy-dark matter connection of photometric galaxies from the HSC-SSP Survey: Galaxy-galaxy lensing and the halo model

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    We infer the connection between the stellar mass of galaxies from the Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) survey, and their dark matter halo masses and its evolution in two bins of redshifts between [0.3,0.8][0.3, 0.8]. We use the measurements of the weak lensing signal of galaxies using background sources from the Year 1 shape catalog from the HSC survey. We bin galaxies in stellar mass with varying thresholds ranging from 8.6log[M/(h2M)]11.28.6 \leq \log [ M_*/(h^{-2} {M_\odot})] \leq 11.2 and use stringent cuts in the selection of source galaxies to measure the weak lensing signal. We model these measurements of the weak lensing signal together with the abundance of galaxies in the halo occupation distribution framework. We obtain constraints on the halo occupation parameters of central galaxies MminM_{\rm min} and σlogM\sigma_{\log M}, which correspond to the halo mass at which central galaxies for each threshold sample reach half occupancy, and its scatter, respectively, along with parameters that describe the occupation of the satellite galaxies. The measurements of abundance and weak lensing individually constrain different degeneracy directions in the MminM_{\rm min} and σlogM\sigma_{\log M} plane, thus breaking the degeneracy in these parameters. We demonstrate that the weak lensing measurements are best able to constrain the average central halo masses, Mcen\langle M_{\rm cen} \rangle. We compare our measurements to those obtained using the abundance and clustering of these galaxies as well as the subhalo abundance matching measurements and demonstrate qualitative agreement. We find that the galaxy-dark matter connection does not vary significantly between redshift bins we explore in this study. Uncertainties in the photometric redshift of the lens galaxies imply that more efforts are required to understand the true underlying stellar mass-halo mass relation of galaxies and its evolution over cosmic epoch

    Initial recruitment and establishment of vascular plants in relation to topographical variation in microsite conditions on a recently-deglaciated moraine on Ellesmere Island, high arctic Canada

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    We investigated the effects of topographical positions (moraine ridge, upper side slope and lower side slope) within a recently-deglaciated young moraine on initial recruitment and establishment of vascular plants. Compared with the moraine ridge, the upper slope had similar/higher abundance of vascular plants in terms of percent cover, frequency occurrence, species number, and density/biomass of a dominating species, Salix arctica. Establishment and growth of vascular plants are generally inhibited on unstable habitats; nevertheless, on this newly-formed moraine, every attribute measured for vascular plants implied a higher probability of vascular plant recruitment on the upper slope, where substrate is less stable than on the ridge. Further, the microsite with greater vascular plant abundance, S. arctica density and S. arctica aboveground/leaf biomass accumulated more organic materials regardless of topographical positions, and such an organic accumulation was deepest on the upper slope, suggesting that relatively-successful plant establishment occurs on this site. This is further supported by the S. arctica population structure, which implies a relatively-constant juvenile supply on the upper slope. Along a slope, unstable gravels easily slide down hill. This topographical process may cause large rock size and high surface cover by rocks on the lower slope. On the upper slope, the percent cover by rocks had therefore become smaller, leading to high cover by fine-grained sediments, which retain moisture favorable for germination and growth of vascular plants. This would enhance the emergence of pioneer vascular plant species, probably resulting in higher vascular plant abundance, density and biomass of S. arctica on the upper slope. This study suggests that during primary succession following deglaciation in the high arctic the upper slope of a newly-formed glacier moraine may be an important location for the initial recruitment and establishment of pioneer vascular plant species, such as S. arctica

    Matter Distribution around Galaxies

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    We explore the mass distribution of material associated with galaxies from the observation of gravitational weak lensing for the galaxy mass correlation function with the aid of NN-body simulations of dark matter. The latter is employed to unfold various contributions that contribute to the integrated line of sight mass density. We conclude that galaxies have no definite edges of the matter distribution, extending to the middle to neighbouring galaxies with the density profile roughly r2.4r^{-2.4} beyond the virial radius. The mass distributed beyond the virial radius (gravitationally bound radius) explains the gap seen in the mass density estimates, the global value Ωm0.27\Omega_m\sim 0.27 and typically Ωgal0.15\Omega_{\rm gal} \sim 0.15 from the luminosity density multiplied by the mass to light ratio. We suggest to use a physical method of gravitational lensing to characterise galaxy samples rather than characterise them with photometric means.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures. ApJ accepte

    Distribution of Dust around Galaxies: An Analytic Model

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    We develop an analytic halo model for the distribution of dust around galaxies. The model results are compared with the observed surface dust density profile measured through reddening of background quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) reported by Menard et al.(2010). We assume that the dust distribution around a galaxy is described by a simple power law, similarly to the mass distribution, but with a sharp cut-off at αRvir\alpha R_{\rm vir} where RvirR_{\rm vir} is the galaxy's virial radius and α\alpha is a model parameter. Our model reproduces the observed dust distribution profile very well over a wide range of radial distance of 10104h110 - 10^{4} h^{-1}kpc. For the characteristic galaxy halo mass of 2×1012h1M2\times 10^{12} h^{-1}M_{\odot} estimated for the SDSS galaxies, the best fit model is obtained if α\alpha is greater than unity, which suggests that dust is distributed to over a few hundred kilo-parsecs from the galaxies. The observed large-scale dust distribution profile is reproduced if we assume the total amount of dust is equal to that estimated from the integrated stellar evolution over the cosmic time.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, corrected typo and minor revisions, results unchanged, MNRAS Letters, in pres
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