4.7 Article

The mass-to-light function of virialized systems and the relationship between their optical and X-ray properties

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 569, Issue 1, Pages 101-111

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/339319

Keywords

dark matter; galaxies : clusters : general; galaxies : halos; galaxies : luminosity function, mass function; large-scale structure of universe; X-rays : general

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We compare the B-band luminosity function of virialized halos with the mass function predicted by the Press-Schechter theory in cold dark matter (CDM) cosmogonies. We find that all cosmological models fail to match our results if a constant mass-to-light ratio is assumed. In order for these models to match the faint end of the luminosity function, a mass-to-light ratio decreasing with luminosity as L-0.5+/-0.06 is required. For a LambdaCDM model, the mass-to-light function has a minimum of similar to100 h(75)(-1) in solar units in the B band, corresponding to similar to25% of the baryons in the form of stars, and this minimum occurs close to the luminosity of an L* galaxy. At the high-mass end, the LambdaCDM model requires a mass-to-light ratio increasing with luminosity as L+0.5+/-0.26. This scaling behavior of the mass-to-light ratio seems to be in qualitative agreement with the predictions of semianalytical models of galaxy formation. In contrast, for the tauCDM model, a constant mass-to-light ratio suffices to match the high-mass end. We also derive the halo occupation number, i.e., the number of galaxies brighter than L-gal* hosted in a virialized system. We find that the halo occupation number scales nonlinearly with the total mass of the system, N-gal(>L-gal*) proportional to M0.55+/-0.026 for the LambdaCDM. We find a break in the power-law slope of the X-ray to optical luminosity relation, independent of the cosmological model. This break occurs at a scale corresponding to poor groups. In the LambdaCDM the poor-group mass is also the scale at which the mass-to-light ratio of virialized systems begins to increase. This correspondence suggests a physical link between star formation and the X-ray properties of halos, possibly due to preheating by supernovae or to efficient cooling of low-entropy gas into galaxies.

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