A link between feedback outflows and satellite galaxy suppression
Sergei Nayakshin, Mark I. Wilkinson

TL;DR
This paper proposes a link between feedback-driven outflows from large galaxies and the suppression of satellite galaxies, suggesting that galactic winds can strip gas from satellites and trigger starbursts, explaining observed discrepancies.
Contribution
It introduces a novel connection between host galaxy feedback processes and satellite galaxy gas loss, providing estimates and evidence for this interaction.
Findings
Galactic outflows can effectively strip gas from nearby satellites.
Many Milky Way satellites show signs of being affected by host outflows.
Outflows may also induce starbursts and globular cluster formation in satellites.
Abstract
We suggest a direct link between the two "missing" baryon problems of contemporary galaxy formation theory: (1) that large galaxies are known to contain too little gas and stars and (2) that too few dwarf satellite galaxies are observed around large galaxies compared with cosmological simulations. The former can be explained by invoking some energetic process -- most likely AGN or star formation feedback -- which expels to infinity a significant fraction of the gas initially present in the proto-galaxy, while the latter problem is usually explained by star formation feedback inside the dwarf or tidal and ram pressure stripping of the gas from the satellite galaxy by its parent. Here we point out that the host galaxy "missing" baryons, if indeed ejected at velocities of hundreds to a thousand km s, must also affect smaller satellite galaxies by stripping or shocking the gas there.…
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