Lopsided and Bulging Distribution of Satellites around Paired Halos. I. Observational Measurements and Comparison with Halo-based Models
Yanhan Guo, Qinglin Ma, Cheng Li

TL;DR
This study examines the asymmetric and bulging patterns of satellite galaxies around paired galaxy halos, finding that these distributions are consistent with standard cosmological models and can be explained by halo overlap and alignment.
Contribution
It provides the first observational measurement of satellite distribution asymmetries around paired halos and demonstrates their consistency with halo-based models in a ΛCDM universe.
Findings
Satellites show a lopsided distribution towards the space between galaxy pairs.
A bulging distribution along the line connecting the pair centers is observed.
Mock catalogs replicate the observed satellite distributions successfully.
Abstract
We investigate the angular distribution of satellite galaxies in and around pairs of galaxy groups in SDSS and compare the results with the satellite distribution in pairs of dark matter halos by constructing mock catalogs that account for the same selection effects as the observational sample. We find that the angular distribution of satellites in both SDSS and the mock catalog exhibits a pronounced tendency towards lopsidedness, with satellites preferentially located between the two central galaxies. Additionally, there is a significant bulging distribution characterized by a higher concentration of satellites along the line connecting the two centrals compared to those found perpendicular to it. The lopsided and bulging distributions strengthen as pair separation and halo mass increase. The mock catalog successfully reproduces the observational results across all cases considered. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies · Planetary Science and Exploration · Spacecraft Design and Technology
