A Lonely Giant: The Sparse Satellite Population of M94 Challenges Galaxy Formation
Adam Smercina, Eric F. Bell, Paul A. Price, Richard D'Souza, Colin T., Slater, Jeremy Ballin, Antonela Monachesi, David Nidever

TL;DR
This study reveals that the galaxy M94 has an unusually sparse satellite population, challenging existing galaxy formation models and suggesting the need for more stochastic satellite formation processes.
Contribution
The paper presents the discovery of a galaxy with fewer satellites than predicted, highlighting the necessity to revise models of satellite galaxy formation for MW-mass systems.
Findings
M94 has only two satellites, fewer than similar galaxies.
Such sparse satellite populations are extremely rare in current models.
Modifications to the stellar mass-halo mass relation are required to explain observations.
Abstract
The dwarf satellites of `giant' Milky Way (MW)-mass galaxies are our primary probes of low-mass dark matter halos. The number and velocities of the satellite galaxies of the MW and M31 initially puzzled galaxy formation theorists, but are now reproduced well by many models. Yet, are the MW's and M31's satellites representative? Were galaxy formation models `overfit'? These questions motivate deep searches for satellite galaxies outside the Local Group. We present a deep survey of the `classical' satellites (410) of the MW-mass galaxy M94 out to 150 kpc projected distance. We find satellites, each with , compared with 6-12 such satellites in the four other MW-mass systems with comparable data (MW, M31, M81, M101). Using a `standard' prescription for occupying dark matter halos (taken from the fully…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
