The Lopsided Distribution of Satellites of Isolated Central Galaxies

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Date
2021
Volume
914
Issue
2
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Publisher
London : Institute of Physics Publ.
Abstract

Satellites are not randomly distributed around their central galaxies but show polar and planar structures. In this paper, we investigate the axis asymmetry or lopsidedness of satellite galaxy distributions around isolated galaxies in a hydrodynamic cosmological simulation. We find a statistically significant lopsided signal by studying the angular distribution of the satellite galaxies' projected positions around isolated central galaxies in a two-dimensional plane. The signal is dependent on galaxy mass, color, and large-scale environment. Satellites that inhabit low-mass blue hosts, or located further from the hosts, show the most lopsided signal. Galaxy systems with massive neighbors exhibit stronger lopsidedness. This satellite axis-asymmetry signal also decreases as the universe evolves. Our findings are in agreement with recent observational results and they provide a useful perspective for studying galaxy evolution, especially on the satellite accretion, internal evolution, and interaction with the cosmic large-scale structure. © 2021. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society..

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Keywords
Satellites, axis asymmetry, lopsidedness, galaxy, satellite axis-asymmetry signal, cosmic large-scale structure
Citation
Wang, P., Libeskind, N. I., Pawlowski, M. S., Kang, X., Wang, W., Guo, Q., & Tempel, E. (2021). The Lopsided Distribution of Satellites of Isolated Central Galaxies. 914(2). https://doi.org//10.3847/1538-4357/abfc4f
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License
CC BY 4.0 Unported