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The abundance of ultra-diffuse galaxies from groups to clusters UDGs are relatively more common in more massive haloes

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posted on 2024-08-06, 11:19 authored by Remco F.J. Van Der Burg, Henk Hoekstra, Adam Muzzin, Cristóbal Sifón, Massimo Viola, Malcolm N. Bremer, Sarah Brough, Simon P. Driver, Thomas Erben, Catherine Heymans, Hendrik Hildebrandt, Benne W. Holwerda, Dominik Klaes, Konrad Kuijken, Sean McGee, Reiko Nakajima, Nicola Napolitano, Peder Norberg, Edward TaylorEdward Taylor, Edwin Valentijn
In recent years, many studies have reported substantial populations of large galaxies with low surface brightness in local galaxy clusters. Various theories that aim to explain the presence of such ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) have since been proposed. A key question that will help to distinguish between models is whether UDGs have counterparts in host haloes with lower masses, and if so, what their abundance as a function of halo mass is. We here extend our previous study of UDGs in galaxy clusters to galaxy groups. We measure the abundance of UDGs in 325 spectroscopically selected groups from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. We make use of the overlapping imaging from the ESO Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS), from which we can identify galaxies with mean surface brightnesses within their effective radii down to ~25.5 mag arcsec-2 in the r band. We are able to measure a significant overdensity of UDGs (with sizes reff ≥ 1.5 kpc) in galaxy groups down to M200 = 1012 M⊙, a regime where approximately only one in ten groups contains a UDG that we can detect. We combine measurements of the abundance of UDGs in haloes that cover three orders of magnitude in halo mass, finding that their numbers scale quite steeply with halo mass: NUDG(R < R200) ∝ M2001.11±0.07. To better interpret this, we also measure the mass-richness relation for brighter galaxies down to Mr* + 2.5 in the same GAMA groups, and find a much shallower relation of NBright(R < R200) ∝ M2000.78±0.05. This shows that compared to bright galaxies, UDGs are relatively more abundant in massive clusters than in groups. We discuss the implications, but it is still unclear whether this difference is related to a higher destruction rate of UDGs in groups or if massive haloes have a positive effect on UDG formation.

Funding

Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

Science and Technology Facilities Council

Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action

European Research Council

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Dutch Research Council

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ISSN

1432-0746

Journal title

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Volume

607

Article number

article no. A79

Pagination

a79-

Publisher

EDP Sciences

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2017 ESO. Reproduced with permission from Astronomy & Astrophysics, © ESO

Language

eng

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