Luminous Satellites II: Spatial Distribution, Luminosity Function and Cosmic Evolution
A. M. Nierenberg, M. W. Auger, T.Treu, P. J. Marshall, C. D., Fassnacht, Michael T. Busha

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spatial distribution, luminosity function, and cosmic evolution of satellite galaxies around massive hosts using deep HST imaging, revealing consistent power-law profiles and dependencies on host properties.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of satellite distributions and luminosity functions up to redshift 0.8, highlighting the influence of host morphology and mass on satellite properties.
Findings
Satellite density follows a power law with index -1.1
Early-type hosts have more flattened and aligned satellites
Number of satellites correlates with host stellar mass
Abstract
We infer the normalization and the radial and angular distributions of the number density of satellites of massive galaxies () between redshifts 0.1 and 0.8 as a function of host stellar mass, redshift, morphology and satellite luminosity. Exploiting the depth and resolution of the COSMOS HST images, we detect satellites up to eight magnitudes fainter than the host galaxies and as close as 0.3 (1.4) arcseconds (kpc). Describing the number density profile of satellite galaxies to be a projected power law such that , we find . We find no dependency of on host stellar mass, redshift, morphology or satellite luminosity. Satellites of early-type hosts have angular distributions that are more flattened than the host light profile and are aligned with its major axis. No significant average alignment is…
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