Demise of Faint Satellites around Isolated Early-type Galaxies
Changbom Park, Ho Seong Hwang, Hyunbae Park, Jong Chul Lee

TL;DR
This study reveals a cutoff in the luminosity of satellite galaxies around isolated early-type galaxies, suggesting environmental interactions influence satellite populations and addressing the missing satellite galaxy problem.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence that satellite luminosity functions are shaped by host environment, especially around isolated early-type galaxies, highlighting a potential solution to the missing satellite problem.
Findings
Almost no satellites fainter than Mr = -14 around isolated early-type galaxies
Luminosity cutoff at Mr = -15 for early-type satellites, not seen in late-type systems
Satellite properties strongly depend on distance from host galaxy
Abstract
The hierarchical galaxy formation scenario in the Cold Dark Matter cosmogony with a non-vanishing cosmological constant and geometrically flat space has been very successful in explaining the large-scale distribution of galaxies. However, there have been claims that the scenario predicts too many satellite galaxies associated with massive galaxies compared to observations, called the missing satellite galaxy problem. Isolated groups of galaxies hosted by passively evolving massive early-type galaxies are ideal laboratories for finding the missing physics in the current theory. Here we report from a deep spectroscopic survey of such satellite systems that isolated massive early-type galaxies with no recent star formation through wet mergers or accretion have almost no satellite galaxies fainter than the r-band absolute magnitude of about Mr =-14. If only early-type satellites are used,…
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