The Extreme Small Scales: Do Satellite Galaxies Trace Dark Matter?
Douglas F. Watson, Andreas A. Berlind, Cameron K. McBride (Vanderbilt, University), David W. Hogg, Tao Jiang (NYU)

TL;DR
This study models the small-scale clustering of galaxies to understand how satellite galaxies' spatial distribution within dark matter halos varies with luminosity, revealing that brighter galaxies are more centrally concentrated than dark matter.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed halo occupation distribution model allowing variable concentration and inner slope for satellite galaxy profiles, highlighting luminosity-dependent spatial distributions.
Findings
Low luminosity satellites follow NFW profiles
Bright satellites are more centrally concentrated than dark matter
Luminosity influences the spatial distribution of satellite galaxies
Abstract
We investigate the radial distribution of galaxies within their host dark matter halos by modeling their small-scale clustering, as measured in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Specifically, we model the Jiang et al. (2011) measurements of the galaxy two-point correlation function down to very small projected separations (10 < r < 400 kpc/h), in a wide range of luminosity threshold samples (absolute r-band magnitudes of -18 up to -23). We use a halo occupation distribution (HOD) framework with free parameters that specify both the number and spatial distribution of galaxies within their host dark matter halos. We assume that the first galaxy in each halo lives at the halo center and that additional satellite galaxies follow a radial density profile similar to the dark matter Navarro-Frenk-White (NFW) profile, except that the concentration and inner slope are allowed to vary. We find that…
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