The Formation of M101-alike Galaxies in the Cold Dark Matter Model
Dali Zhang, Yu Luo, Xi Kang, Han Qu

TL;DR
This study investigates the large luminosity gap in M101-like galaxies within the Cold Dark Matter model, revealing it as a natural outcome of galaxy formation and linked to accreted subhalo masses.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the large luminosity gap in M101-like galaxies can be explained by the mass of accreted subhaloes using a semi-analytical model combined with N-body simulations.
Findings
Large luminosity gaps are rare (~0.1%-0.2%) but consistent with CDM predictions.
The gap is primarily due to the mass of accreted subhaloes, not stochastic star formation.
The gap will disappear in about 7 Gyr due to mergers.
Abstract
The population of satellite galaxies in a host galaxy is a combination of the cumulative accretion of subhaloes and their associated star formation efficiencies, therefore, the luminosity distribution of satellites provides valuable information of both dark matter properties and star formation physics. Recently, the luminosity function of satellites in nearby Milky Way-mass galaxies has been well measured to satellites as faint as Leo I with . In addition to the finding of the diversity in the satellite luminosity functions, it has been noticed that there is a big gap among the magnitude of satellites in some host galaxies, such as M101, where the gap is around 5 in magnitude, noticeably larger than the prediction from the halo abundance matching method. The reason of this gap is still unknown. In this paper, we use a semi-analytical model of galaxy formation, combined…
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