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Can we use weak lensing to measure total mass profiles of galaxies on 20 kpc scales?

Authors :
Kobayashi, Masato I. N.
Leauthaud, Alexie
More, Surhud
Nobuhiro Okabe
Laigle, Clotilde
Rhodes, Jason
Takeuchi, Tsutomu T.
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society; 5/11/2015, Vol. 449 Issue 2, p2128-2143, 16p
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Current constraints on dark matter density profiles from weak lensing are typically limited to radial scales greater than 50-100 kpc. In this paper, we explore the possibility of probing the very inner regions of galaxy/halo density profiles by measuring stacked weak lensing on scales of only a few tens of kpc. Our forecasts focus on scales smaller than the 'equality radius' (R<subscript>eq</subscript>), where the stellar component and the dark matter component contribute equally to the lensing signal. We compute the evolution of R<subscript>eq</subscript> as a function of lens stellar mass and redshift and show that R<subscript>eq</subscript> = 7-34 kpc for galaxies with M* = 10<superscript>9.5</superscript>-10<superscript>11.5</superscript> M<subscript>Θ</subscript>. Unbiased shear measurements will be challenging on these scales. We introduce a simple metric to quantify how many source galaxies overlap with their neighbours and for which shear measurements will be challenging. Rejecting source galaxies with close-by companions results in an ~20 per cent decrease in the overall source density. Despite this decrease, we show that Euclid and Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope will be able to constrain galaxy/halo density profiles at R<subscript>eq</subscript> with S/N >20 for M* > 10<superscript>10</superscript> M<subscript>Θ</subscript>. Weak lensing measurements at R<subscript>eq</subscript>, in combination with stellar kinematics on smaller scales, will be a powerful means by which to constrain both the inner slope of the dark matter density profile as well as the mass and redshift dependence of the stellar initial mass function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Volume :
449
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
110198984
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stv424