摘要: Based on independent shear measurements using the DECaLS/DR8 imaging data, we
measure the weak lensing signals around isolated central galaxies (ICGs) from
SDSS/DR7 at $z\sim0.1$. The projected stellar mass density profiles of
surrounding satellite galaxies are further deduced, using photometric sources
from the Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) survey (pDR3). The signals of ICGs $+$ their
extended stellar halos are taken from Wang et al.(2021). All measurements are
compared with predictions by the Illustris-TNG300-1 simulation. We find,
overall, a good agreement between observation and TNG300. In particular, a
correction to the stellar mass of massive observed ICGs is applied based on the
calibration of He et al.(2013), which brings a much better agreement with
TNG300 predicted lensing signals at $\log_{10}M_\ast/M_\odot>11.1$. In real
observation, red ICGs are hosted by more massive dark matter halos, have more
satellites and more extended stellar halos than blue ICGs at fixed stellar
mass. However, in TNG300 there are more satellites around blue ICGs at fixed
stellar mass, and the outer stellar halos of red and blue ICGs are similar. The
stellar halos of TNG galaxies are more extended compared with real observed
galaxies, especially for blue ICGs with $\log_{10}M_\ast/M_\odot>10.8$. We find
the same trend for TNG100 galaxies and for true halo central galaxies. The
tensions between TNG and real galaxies might indicate that satellite
disruptions are stronger in TNG. In both TNG300 and observation, satellites
approximately trace the underlying dark matter distribution beyond
$0.1R_{200}$, but the fraction of total stellar mass in TNG300 does not show
the same radial distribution as real galaxies.