The Luminosity Function in Groups of Galaxis
R. Brent Tully

TL;DR
This study investigates the luminosity functions of galaxy groups, revealing flatter faint-end slopes than predicted by LambdaCDM, with environmental variations suggesting galaxy merging influences, but questioning the role of reionization in dwarf galaxy scarcity.
Contribution
It provides detailed luminosity functions for local galaxy groups down to faint magnitudes, highlighting environmental effects and challenging existing cosmological predictions.
Findings
Faint-end slopes range from -1.35 to -1.2
Dwarf galaxy populations are roughly constant per halo mass
Environmental variations support galaxy merging scenarios
Abstract
With targeted imaging of groups in the local volume, the regions of collapse around bright galaxies can be clearly identified by the distribution of dwarfs and luminosity functions can be established to very faint levels. In the case of the M81 Group there is completion to M_R ~ -9. In all well studied cases, the faint end slopes are in the range -1.35 < alpha < -1.2, much flatter than the slope for the bottom end of the halo mass spectrum anticipated by LambdaCDM hierarchical clustering theory. Small but significant variations are found with environment. Interestingly, the populations of dwarf galaxies are roughly constant per unit halo mass. With the numbers of dwarfs as an anchor point, evolved environments (dominated by early morphological types) have relatively fewer intermediate luminosity systems and at least one relatively more important galaxy at the core. The variations with…
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