Unions with UNIONS: Using galaxy-galaxy lensing to probe galaxy mergers
Abstract
We use galaxy-galaxy lensing to investigate how the dark matter (DM) haloes and stellar content of galaxies with 0.012 ≤ z ≤ 0.32 and 10 ≤ 10(M/M) ≤ 12 change as a result of the merger process. To this end, we construct two samples of galaxies obtained from the Ultraviolet Near Infrared Optical Northern Survey (UNIONS), comprising 1 623 post-mergers and 30 000 non-merging controls, that live in low-density environments to use as our lenses. These samples are weighted to share the same distributions of stellar mass, redshift, and geometric mean distance to a galaxy's three nearest neighbours to ensure differences in the lensing signal are due to the merger process itself. We do not detect a statistically significant difference in the excess surface density profile of post-mergers and non-merging controls with current data. Fitting haloes composed of a point-like stellar mass component and an extended DM structure described by a Navarro-Frenk-White profile to the lensing measurements yields, for both samples, halo masses of Mhalo 4×1012\,M and a moderately negative correlation between Mhalo and concentration c. This allows us to rule out, at the 95% confidence level, merger-induced starbursts in which more than 60% of the stellar mass is formed in the burst. The application of our methods to upcoming surveys that are able to provide samples 10× larger than our current catalogue are expected to detect the weak-lensing signatures of mergers and further constrain their properties.
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