IATE   20350
INSTITUTO DE ASTRONOMIA TEORICA Y EXPERIMENTAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
PROPERTIES OF SATELLITE GALAXIES IN THE SDSS PHOTOMETRIC SURVEY: LUMINOSITIES, COLOURS AND PROJECTED NUMBER DENSITY PROFILES.
Autor/es:
LARES MARCELO; DIEGO GARCIA LAMBAS; MARIANO JAVIER DE LEON DOMINGUEZ ROMERO
Revista:
ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Editorial:
IOP PUBLISHING LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2011 vol. 142 p. 13 - 20
ISSN:
0004-6256
Resumen:
We analyze photometric data in SDSS-DR7 to infer statistical properties of faint satellites associated to isolated bright galaxies (Mr < −20.5) in the redshift range 0.03 < z < 0.1. The mean projected radial number density profile shows an excess of companions in the photometric sample around the primaries, with approximately a power law shape that extends up to ≃ 700 kpc. Given this overdensity signal, a suitable background subtraction method is used to study the statistical properties of the population of bound satellites, down to magnitude Mr = −14.5, in the projected radial distance range 100 < rp/kpc < 3 < Rvir >. The maximum projected distance corresponds is in the range 470 − 660kpc for the different samples. We have also considered a colour cut consistent with the observed colours of spectroscopic satellites in nearby galaxies so that distant redshifted galaxies do not dominate the statistics. We have tested the implementation of this background subtraction procedure using a mock catalogue derived from the Millenium simulation SAM galaxy catalogue based on a CDM model. We find that the method is effective in reproducing the true projected radial satellite number density profile and luminosity distributions, providing confidence in the results derived from SDSS data. We find that the spatial extent of satellite systems is larger for bright, red primaries. Also, we find a larger spatial distribution of blue satellites. For the different samples analyzed, we derive the average number of satellites and their luminosity distributions down to Mr = −14.5. The mean number of satellites depends very strongly on host luminosity. Bright primaries (Mr < −21.5) host on average ∼ 6 satellites with Mr < −14.5. This number is reduced for primaries with lower luminosities (−21.5 < Mr < −20.5) which have less than 1 satellites per host. We provide Schechter function fits to the luminosity distributions of satellite galaxies where the resulting faint end slopes equal to 1.3 ± 0.2, consistent with the universal value. This shows that satellites of bright primaries lack an excess population of faint objects, in agreement with the results in the MilkyWay and nearby galaxies.