Relating the Diverse Merger Histories and Satellite Populations of Nearby Galaxies
Draft version July 12, 2021 Typeset using LATEX twocolumn style in AASTeX63 Relating the Diverse Merger Histories and Satellite Populations of Nearby Galaxies Adam Smercina ,1 Eric F. Bell ,2 Jenna Samuel ,3 and Richard D'Souza 2, 4 1Astronomy Department, University of Washington, Box 351580, Seattle, WA 98195-1580, USA 2Department of Astronomy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA 3Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA 4Vatican Observatory, Specola Vaticana, V-00120, Vatican City State ABSTRACT We investigate whether the considerable diversity in the satellite populations of nearby Milky Way (MW)-mass galaxies is connected with the diversity in their host's merger histories. Analyzing 8 nearby galaxies with extensive observations of their satellite populations and stellar halos, we characterize each galaxy's merger history using the metric of its most dominant merger, M?;Dom, defined as the greater of either its total accreted stellar mass or most massive current satellite. We find an unexpectedly tight relationship between these galaxies' number of MV < 9 satellites within − 150 kpc (NSat) and M?;Dom. This relationship remains even after accounting for differences in galaxy mass. Using the star formation and orbital histories of satellites around the MW and M81, we demonstrate that both likely evolved along the M?;Dom{NSat relation during their current dominant mergers with the LMC and M82, respectively. We investigate the presence of this relation in galaxy formation models, including using the FIRE simulations to directly compare to the observations. We find no relation between M?;Dom and NSat in FIRE, and a universally large scatter in NSat with M?;Dom across models | in direct contrast with the tightness of the empirical relation.
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