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Dynamical evidence for a morphology-dependent relation between the stellar and halo masses of galaxies (2102.11282v1)

Published 22 Feb 2021 in astro-ph.GA and astro-ph.CO

Abstract: We derive the stellar-to-halo mass relation (SHMR), namely $f_\star\propto M_\star/M_{\rm h}$ versus $M_\star$ and $M_{\rm h}$, for early-type galaxies from their near-IR luminosities (for $M_\star$) and the position-velocity distributions of their globular cluster systems (for $M_{\rm h}$). Our individual estimates of $M_{\rm h}$ are based on fitting a dynamical model with a distribution function expressed in terms of action-angle variables and imposing a prior on $M_{\rm h}$ from the concentration-mass relation in the standard $\Lambda$CDM cosmology. We find that the SHMR for early-type galaxies declines with mass beyond a peak at $M_\star\sim 5\times 10{10}M_\odot$ and $M_{\rm h}\sim 10{12}M_\odot$ (near the mass of the Milky Way). This result is consistent with the standard SHMR derived by abundance matching for the general population of galaxies, and with previous, less robust derivations of the SHMR for early types. However, it contrasts sharply with the monotonically rising SHMR for late types derived from extended HI rotation curves and the same $\Lambda$CDM prior on $M_{\rm h}$ as we adopt for early types. The SHMR for massive galaxies varies more or less continuously, from rising to falling, with decreasing disc fraction and decreasing Hubble type. We also show that the different SHMRs for late and early types are consistent with the similar scaling relations between their stellar velocities and masses (Tully-Fisher and Faber-Jackson relations). Differences in the relations between the stellar and halo virial velocities account for the similarity of the scaling relations. We argue that all these empirical findings are natural consequences of a picture in which galactic discs are built mainly by smooth and gradual inflow, regulated by feedback from young stars, while galactic spheroids are built by a cooperation between merging, black-hole fuelling, and feedback from AGNs.

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