ArXiv TLDR

Anisotropy of Satellite Galaxies-I: Contrasting Correlations with Central Galaxy, Host Halo, and Large-Scale Filament Structures

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2604.27845

Zhuoming Zhang, Weiguang Cui, Yun Chen, Romeel Davé, Katarina Kraljic

astro-ph.GAastro-ph.CO

TLDR

Satellite galaxy anisotropy aligns with host halo major axes, showing a scale-dependent transition from central galaxy to halo triaxiality to cosmic filaments.

Key contributions

  • Satellite galaxy anisotropy consistently aligns with host halo/central galaxy major axes across cosmic time.
  • Discovered a 3σ scale-dependent shift in anisotropy drivers: central galaxy, host halo, then cosmic filaments.
  • Kinematic analysis shows satellites prefer major-axis regions due to trajectory dynamics, erasing primordial signals.

Why it matters

This paper clarifies the complex interplay of forces shaping satellite galaxy distributions. It provides a kinematic explanation for how different cosmic structures influence satellite anisotropy at varying scales, improving our understanding of galaxy evolution.

Original Abstract

Using the SIMBA, EAGLE, and IllustrisTNG-100 galaxy formation simulations, we examine the anisotropy of the satellite distribution and its dependencies on central galaxies, host halos, and cosmic filaments. We find that in all simulations the satellite anisotropy is robustly aligned with the halo/central galaxy major axis. This correlation is both redshift- and halo-mass-dependent and also extends to filamentary structures outside the halo to several virial radii. The alignment persists up to $z=1.5$ at high redshifts, and the mass dependence remains down to $M_\mathrm{200c} \approx 10^{11}M_{\odot}$. We identify a clear $3σ$ scale-dependent transition in the structural tracers of satellite anisotropy: satellite distributions correlate with central galaxy morphology at small scales ($<0.3R_{\rm 200c}$), are governed by host halo triaxiality at halo scales ($0.3$-$2R_{\rm 200c}$), and align with cosmic filaments beyond $2R_{\rm 200c}$. By tracing satellite trajectories in SIMBA, we uncover the kinematic origin of this transition, demonstrating that satellites prefer halo major-axis aligned regions because their trajectories intersect this axis far more frequently and stay in it for a longer time under the host's gravitational potential. This dynamical processing effectively erases primordial filament-related signals upon accretion ($<2R_{\rm 200c}$), explaining the shift in dominant structural tracers across scales.

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