The SAGA Survey. III. A Census of 101 Satellite Systems around Milky Way-mass Galaxies

Authors: Yao-Yuan Mao (U Utah), Marla Geha (Yale), Risa H. Wechsler (Stanford/SLAC/KIPAC), Yasmeen Asali (Yale), Yunchong Wang (Stanford/SLAC/KIPAC), Erin Kado-Fong (Yale), Nitya Kallivayalil (U Virginia), Ethan O. Nadler (Carnegie Obs), Erik J. Tollerud (STScI), Benjamin Weiner (U Arizona/Steward), Mithi A. C. de los Reyes (Amherst College), John F. Wu (STScI)

arXiv: 2404.14498v1 - DOI (astro-ph.GA)
38 pages, 22 figures, 7 tables. This paper is part of the SAGA Survey Data Release 3. Survey website: https://sagasurvey.org/

Abstract: We present the third Data Release (DR3) of the Satellites Around Galactic Analogs (SAGA) Survey, a spectroscopic survey characterizing satellite galaxies around Milky Way (MW)-mass galaxies. The SAGA Survey DR3 includes 378 satellites identified across 101 MW-mass systems in the distance range 25-40.75 Mpc, and an accompanying redshift catalog of background galaxies (including about 46,000 taken by SAGA) in the SAGA footprint of 84.7 sq. deg. The number of confirmed satellites per system ranges from zero to 13, in the stellar mass range 10^6 to 10^10 solar masses. Based on a detailed completeness model, this sample accounts for 94% of the true satellite population down to a stellar mass of 10^7.5 solar masses. We find that the mass of the most massive satellite in SAGA systems is the strongest predictor of satellite abundance; one-third of the SAGA systems contain LMC-mass satellites, and they tend to have more satellites than the MW. The SAGA satellite radial distribution is less concentrated than the MW, and the SAGA quenched fraction below 10^8.5 solar masses is lower than the MW, but in both cases, the MW is within 1 sigma of SAGA system-to-system scatter. SAGA satellites do not exhibit a clear corotating signal as has been suggested in the MW/M31 satellite systems. Although the MW differs in many respects from the typical SAGA system, these differences can be reconciled if the MW is an older, slightly less massive host with a recently accreted LMC/SMC system.

Submitted to arXiv on 22 Apr. 2024

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