Dwarf Galaxies at Cosmic Noon: New JWST Constraints on Satellite Models and Subhalo Tidal Evolution
Jenny T. Wan (1, 2), Philip Mansfield (1), Katherine A. Suess (3), Yunchong Wang (1, 2, and 4), Sihan Yuan (1, 4), Christina C. Williams (5), and Risa H. Wechsler (1, 2, and 4) ((1) Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics & Cosmology, (2) Stanford University

TL;DR
This study uses JWST observations to compare high-redshift satellite galaxy counts with cosmological simulations, highlighting the impact of tidal evolution assumptions on predictions and demonstrating JWST's potential to test galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It introduces a framework to assess subhalo tidal evolution effects on satellite populations at high redshift, aligning models with JWST data for the first time.
Findings
JWST data is consistent with models within 1-2 sigma.
Galaxy disruption models can alter satellite mass functions by a factor of ~3.5.
Subhalos are at least as long-lived as hydrodynamic simulations suggest.
Abstract
The advent of JWST has revolutionized the study of faint satellite galaxies at , enabling statistical constraints on galaxy evolution and the galaxyhalo connection in a previously unexplored mass and redshift regime. We compare satellite abundances at from recent JWST observations with predictions from cosmological dark matter-only zoom-in simulations. We identify and quantify several sources of biases that can impact theoretical satellite counts, finding that assumptions about subhalo tidal evolution introduce the largest uncertainty in predictions for the satellite mass function. Using a flexible galaxy disruption model, we explore a range of disruption scenarios, spanning hydrodynamically motivated and idealized prescriptions, to bracket plausible physical outcomes. We show that varying galaxy durability can change the predicted satellite mass functions…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Technology and Applications
