The abundance of satellites around Milky Way- and M31-like galaxies with the TNG50 simulation: a matter of diversity
Christoph Engler, Annalisa Pillepich, Anna Pasquali, Dylan Nelson,, Vicente Rodriguez-Gomez, Kun Ting Eddie Chua, Eva K. Grebel, Volker Springel,, Federico Marinacci, Rainer Weinberger, Mark Vogelsberger, Lars Hernquist

TL;DR
This study uses the TNG50 simulation to analyze the diversity and abundance of satellite galaxies around Milky Way- and M31-like galaxies, revealing significant host-to-host variation and consistency with observations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed statistical analysis of satellite galaxy populations around MW/M31 analogues in the TNG50 simulation, highlighting diversity and agreement with observational data.
Findings
Median of 5 satellites per host with Mstar > 5*10^6 Msun
Satellite abundance correlates with host mass and assembly history
No missing satellites problem in TNG50 simulation
Abstract
We study the abundance of satellite galaxies around 198 Milky Way- (MW) and M31-like hosts in TNG50, the final instalment in the IllustrisTNG suite of cosmological magnetohydrodynamical simulations. MW/M31-like analogues are defined as disky galaxies with stellar masses of Mstar = 10^10.5-11.2 Msun in relative isolation at z = 0. By defining satellites as galaxies with Mstar > 5*10^6 Msun within 300 kpc (3D) of their host, we find a remarkable level of diversity and host-to-host scatter across individual host galaxies. The median (16th - 84th percentiles) TNG50 MW/M31-like galaxy hosts a total of 5 (2-11) satellites with Mstar > 5*10^6 Msun, reaching up to Mstar ~ 10^8.5 Msun (10^7.4-9.4 Msun). The abundance of subhaloes with Mdyn > 5*10^7 Msun is larger by a factor of more than 10. The number of all satellites (subhaloes) ever accreted is larger by a factor of 4-5 (3-5) than those…
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