Satellite abundances around bright isolated galaxies
Wenting Wang, Simon D. M. White

TL;DR
This study analyzes satellite galaxy populations around isolated bright galaxies in SDSS, revealing how satellite properties depend on primary galaxy characteristics and comparing observations with mock simulations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of satellite galaxy abundances, colours, and distributions around primaries, and evaluates the performance of galaxy formation models against observational data.
Findings
Satellite abundance scales with primary stellar mass, roughly proportional to dark halo mass.
Red primaries host more satellites than blue ones of the same stellar mass.
Simulations qualitatively reproduce trends but differ in satellite colour and luminosity function steepness.
Abstract
We study satellite galaxy abundances in SDSS by counting photometric galaxies around isolated bright primaries. We present results as a function of the luminosity, stellar mass and colour of the satellites, and of the stellar mass and colour of the primaries. For massive primaries the luminosity and stellar mass functions of satellites are similar in shape to those of field galaxies, but for lower mass primaries they are significantly steeper. The steepening is particularly marked for the stellar mass function. Satellite abundance increases strongly with primary stellar mass, approximately in proportion to expected dark halo mass. Massive red primaries have up to a factor of 2 more satellites than blue ones of the same stellar mass. Satellite galaxies are systematically redder than field galaxies of the same stellar mass. Satellites are also systematically redder around more massive…
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