The SAGA Survey. IV. The Star Formation Properties of 101 Satellite Systems around Milky Way-mass Galaxies

Auteurs : Marla Geha (Yale), Yao-Yuan Mao (U Utah), Risa H. Wechsler (Stanford/SLAC/KIPAC), Yasmeen Asali (Yale), 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), Yunchong Wang (Stanford/SLAC/KIPAC), John F. Wu (STScI)

arXiv: 2404.14499v1 - DOI (astro-ph.GA)
25 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables. This paper is part of the SAGA Survey Data Release 3. Survey website: https://sagasurvey.org

Résumé : We present the star-forming properties of 378 satellite galaxies around 101 Milky Way analogs in the Satellites Around Galactic Analogs (SAGA) Survey, focusing on the environmental processes that suppress or quench star formation. In the SAGA stellar mass range of 10^6 to 10^10 solar masses, we present quenched fractions, star-forming rates, gas-phase metallicities, and gas content. The fraction of SAGA satellites that are quenched increases with decreasing stellar mass and shows significant system-to-system scatter. SAGA satellite quenched fractions are highest in the central 100 kpc of their hosts and decline out to the virial radius. Splitting by specific star formation rate (sSFR), the least star-forming satellite quartile follows the radial trend of the quenched population. The median sSFR of star-forming satellites increases with decreasing stellar mass and is roughly constant with projected radius. Star-forming SAGA satellites are consistent with the star formation rate-stellar mass relationship determined in the Local Volume, while the median gas-phase metallicity is higher and median HI gas mass is lower at all stellar masses. We investigate the dependence of the satellite quenched fraction on host properties. Quenched fractions are higher in systems with higher host halo mass, but this trend is only seen in the inner 100 kpc; systems with a massive neighbor within 2.5 Mpc show higher quenched fractions at all radii. Our results suggest that lower mass satellites and satellites inside 100 kpc are more efficiently quenched in a Milky Way-like environment, with these processes acting sufficiently slowly to preserve a population of star-forming satellites at all stellar masses and projected radii.

Soumis à arXiv le 22 Avr. 2024

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