Extinguishing the FIRE: environmental quenching of satellite galaxies around Milky Way-mass hosts in simulations
Jenna Samuel, Andrew Wetzel, Isaiah Santistevan, Erik Tollerud, Jorge, Moreno, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Jeremy Bailin, Bhavya Pardasani

TL;DR
This study uses FIRE-2 simulations to analyze how environmental factors and host galaxy properties influence star formation quenching in satellite galaxies around Milky Way-mass hosts, revealing mass-dependent quenching mechanisms and environmental effects.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental regulation of satellite galaxy quenching, including the role of host gas content and the impact of infall history, with simulation results matching some observed trends.
Findings
Lower-mass satellites are mostly quiescent.
Higher-mass satellites are mostly star-forming.
Quenching often occurs during or after infall into the host halo.
Abstract
The star formation and gas content of satellite galaxies around the Milky Way (MW) and Andromeda (M31) are depleted relative to more isolated galaxies in the Local Group (LG) at fixed stellar mass. We explore the environmental regulation of gas content and quenching of star formation in galaxies at around 14 MW-mass hosts from the FIRE-2 simulations. Lower-mass satellites () are mostly quiescent and higher-mass satellites () are mostly star-forming, with intermediate-mass satellites () split roughly equally between quiescent and star-forming. Hosts with more gas in their circumgalactic medium have a higher quiescent fraction of massive satellites (). We find no significant dependence on isolated versus paired (LG-like) host…
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