skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Implications of the correlation between bulge-to-total baryonic mass ratio and the number of satellites for SAGA galaxies

Journal Article · · Astronomy and Astrophysics

We searched for correlations between the number of satellites and fundamental galactic properties for the Milky Way-like host galaxies in order to better understand their diverse satellite populations. We specifically aim to understand why galaxies that are very similar in stellar mass content, star formation rate, and local environment have very different numbers of satellites. Deep and extensive spectroscopic observations are needed to characterize the complete satellite luminosity function beyond the Local Group. One such endeavor is an ongoing Satellites of Galactic Analogs (SAGA) spectroscopic survey that has completed spectroscopic observations of 36 Milky Way-like galaxies within their virial radii down to the luminosity of Leo I dwarf galaxy. We correlated the number of satellites of SAGA galaxies with several fundamental properties of their hosts – including total specific angular momentum, which is considered to be well preserved throughout galaxy lifetime – in an attempt to identify the main driver of their diverse satellite populations. We aim to reveal some intrinsic galactic property decisive in making more or less satellites irrespective of baryonic mass or the environment in which galaxies reside. We modeled Spitzer Heritage Archive images of SAGA host galaxies at 3.6 and 4.5 microns with GALFIT code to obtain their stellar masses. We also searched the Extragalactic Database for information on their gas content and rotation velocities. Empirical correlations, like the baryonic Tully–Fisher relation and the stellar mass–size relation were used to exclude outliers. All the available galactic properties from the literature along with measured stellar masses were correlated with the number of satellites and no significant correlation was found. However, when we considered the “expected” number of satellites based on the correlation between the baryonic bulge-to-total ratio and the number of satellites confirmed for several nearby galaxies then strong correlations emerge between this number and (1) the mass of the bulge, and (2) the total specific angular momentum. The first correlation is positive, implying that galaxies with more massive bulges have more satellites, as already confirmed. Furthermore, the second correlation with the angular momentum is negative, meaning that, the smaller the angular momentum, the greater the number of expected satellites. This would imply that either satellites cannot form if galaxy angular momentum is too high, or that satellites form inside-out, so that angular momentum is being transferred to the outer parts of the galaxies. However, deeper spectroscopic observations are needed to confirm these findings, because they rely on the expected rather than detected number of satellites. There was a luminosity limit to the SAGA survey equivalent to the luminosity of Leo I dwarf satellite of the Milky Way galaxy (the SAGA limit). In particular, correlations found in this work are very susceptible to the total number of satellites of the NGC 4158 galaxy. This galaxy is predicted to have many more satellites than detected up to the SAGA limit.

Research Organization:
US Department of Energy (USDOE), Washington, DC (United States). Office of Science, Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC); Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia; National Science Foundation (NSF); Heising-Simons Foundation
Grant/Contract Number:
451-03-68/2022-14/200002; AST-1517148; AST-1517422; 2019-1402
OSTI ID:
1982334
Journal Information:
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Vol. 662; ISSN 0004-6361
Publisher:
EDP SciencesCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (38)

THE SPITZER SURVEY OF STELLAR STRUCTURE IN GALAXIES (S 4 G): STELLAR MASSES, SIZES, AND RADIAL PROFILES FOR 2352 NEARBY GALAXIES journal July 2015
THE SPITZER SURVEY OF STELLAR STRUCTURE IN GALAXIES (S 4 G): PRECISE STELLAR MASS DISTRIBUTIONS FROM AUTOMATED DUST CORRECTION AT 3.6 μ m journal July 2015
A correlation between the number of satellites and the bulge-to-total baryonic mass ratio extending beyond the Local Group journal January 2020
Resolving cosmic structure formation with the Millennium-II Simulation journal September 2009
The Baryonic Tully‐Fisher Relation of Galaxies with Extended Rotation Curves and the Stellar Mass of Rotating Galaxies journal October 2005
Color-Mass-To-Light-Ratio Relations for disk Galaxies journal September 2014
Too big to fail? The puzzling darkness of massive Milky Way subhaloes: Massive dark subhaloes in the Milky Way journal June 2011
The ATLAS3D project - I. A volume-limited sample of 260 nearby early-type galaxies: science goals and selection criteria: The ATLAS3D project - I. The sample journal March 2011
On the Determination of Rotation Velocity and Dynamical Mass of Galaxies Based on Integrated H i Spectra journal July 2020
The Extragalactic Distance Database journal June 2009
Detailed Decomposition of Galaxy Images. ii. Beyond Axisymmetric Models journal April 2010
The Observed Properties of Dwarf Galaxies in and Around the Local Group journal June 2012
The 2M++ galaxy redshift catalogue: The 2M++ galaxy redshift catalogue journal August 2011
The star Formation History of the Large Magellanic Cloud journal September 2009
Angular Momentum and Galaxy Formation Revisited journal November 2012
The Faint End of the Centaurus A Satellite Luminosity Function journal February 2019
The SAGA Survey. I. Satellite Galaxy Populations around Eight Milky Way Analogs journal September 2017
The rotationally stabilized VPOS and predicted proper motions of the Milky Way satellite galaxies journal September 2013
New lessons from the H i size–mass relation of galaxies journal May 2016
The Cosmogrid Simulation: Statistical Properties of Small dark Matter Halos journal April 2013
Confirmation of Faint Dwarf Galaxies in the m81 Group journal October 2013
Galaxy masses journal January 2014
The ATLAS3D project - II. Morphologies, kinemetric features and alignment between photometric and kinematic axes of early-type galaxies: Morphologies, kinematics and alignment journal June 2011
Using Surface Brightness Fluctuations to Study nearby Satellite Galaxy Systems: The Complete Satellite System of M101 journal June 2019
THE IMPACT OF BARS ON DISK BREAKS AS PROBED BY S 4 G IMAGING journal June 2013
Where Are the Missing Galactic Satellites? journal September 1999
A Lonely Giant: The Sparse Satellite Population of M94 Challenges Galaxy Formation journal August 2018
CONVERTING FROM 3.6 AND 4.5 μm FLUXES TO STELLAR MASS journal May 2012
The M101 Satellite Luminosity Function and the Halo–Halo Scatter among Local Volume Hosts journal November 2019
The Number of Dwarf Satellites of Disk Galaxies versus their Bulge Mass in the Standard Model of Cosmology journal January 2019
An extensive catalogue of early-type galaxies in the nearby Universe journal May 2016
PAndAS’ CUBS: DISCOVERY OF TWO NEW DWARF GALAXIES IN THE SURROUNDINGS OF THE ANDROMEDA AND TRIANGULUM GALAXIES journal October 2009
The SAGA Survey. II. Building a Statistical Sample of Satellite Systems around Milky Way–like Galaxies journal February 2021
The Baryonic Tully-Fisher Relation journal April 2000
The Spitzer Survey of Stellar Structure in Galaxies
  • Sheth, Kartik; Regan, Michael; Hinz, Joannah L.
  • Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Vol. 122, Issue 898 https://doi.org/10.1086/657638
journal December 2010
The Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (Wise): Mission Description and Initial On-Orbit Performance journal November 2010
A whirling plane of satellite galaxies around Centaurus A challenges cold dark matter cosmology journal February 2018
Detection of the Baryon Acoustic Peak in the Large‐Scale Correlation Function of SDSS Luminous Red Galaxies journal November 2005