Harley J Brown, Garreth Martin, Frazer R Pearce, Nina A Hatch, Yannick M Bahé, Yohan Dubois
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Assembly of the Intracluster Light in the Horizon-AGN Simulation
The diffuse stellar component of galaxy clusters made up of intergalactic stars is termed the intracluster light (ICL). Though there is a developing understanding of the mechanisms by which the ICL is formed, no strong consensus has yet been reached on which objects the stars of the ICL are primarily sourced from. We investigate the assembly of the ICL starting approximately 10 Gyr before z = 0 in 11 galaxy clusters (halo masses between ∼1 × 1014 M⊙ and ∼7 × 1014 M⊙ at z ≈ 0) in the Horizon-AGN simulation. By tracking the stars of galaxies that fall into these clusters past cluster infall, we are able to link almost all of the z ≈ 0 ICL back to progenitor objects. Satellite stripping, mergers, and pre-processing are all found to make significant contributions to the ICL, but any contribution from in-situ star-formation directly into the ICL appears negligible. Even after compensating for resolution effects, we find that approximately 90percnt of the stacked ICL of the 11 clusters that is not pre-processed should come from galaxies infalling with stellar masses above 109 M⊙, with roughly half coming from infalling galaxies with stellar masses within half a dex of 1011 M⊙. The fact that the ICL appears largely sourced from such massive objects suggests that the ICL assembly of any individual cluster may be principally stochastic.
期刊介绍:
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society is one of the world''s leading primary research journals in astronomy and astrophysics, as well as one of the longest established. It publishes the results of original research in positional and dynamical astronomy, astrophysics, radio astronomy, cosmology, space research and the design of astronomical instruments.