Astrolunch by Marcello Cacciato (MPIA)

Date: 
Tue, 03/03/200912:15-13:15
Location: 
Kaplun Bldg, seminar room, 2nd floor
Galaxy-Dark Matter Connection: from Astrophysics to Cosmology
Galaxy-galaxy (g-g) lensing represents an ideal technique to constrain the dark matter distribution on galaxy scales. The required accuracy in the signal can be achieved only by stacking many foreground galaxies and averaging the ellipticity of the resulting background galaxies. Unfortunately, the stacking procedure complicates any astro-physical interpretation. In order to extract information from the composite g-g lensing signal, a reliable model of the way galaxies populate dark matter haloes is required. We use a realistic description of the halo occupation statistics based on the conditional luminosity function. It provides a statistical prescription for the number of galaxies with a given luminosity living in dark matter haloes of a given mass. Being 'a priori' constrained by the luminosity dependence of the galaxy clustering, it can be used for predicting the g-g lensing signal without any additional tuning. Our model allows a thorough understanding of the different terms contributing to the signal. We carefully explore the effect of the assumptions entering the model. Our theoretical predictions are in very good agreement with SDSS data. Furthermore, we investigate the feasibility of a joint analysis of galaxy clustering and g-g lensng as a probe for cosmology.