Anisotropic Distribution of SDSS Satellite Galaxies: Planar (Not Polar) Alignment

Published 2005 July 12 © 2005. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Tereasa G. Brainerd 2005 ApJ 628 L101 DOI 10.1086/432713

1538-4357/628/2/L101

Abstract

The distribution of satellite galaxies relative to isolated host galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) is investigated. Host-satellite systems are selected using three different methods, yielding samples of ~3300, ~1600, and ~950 satellites. In the plane of the sky, the distributions of all three samples show highly significant deviations from circular symmetry (>99.99%, >99.99%, and 99.79% confidence levels, respectively), and the degree of anisotropy is a strong function of the projected radius, rp, at which the satellites are found. For rp ≲ 100 kpc, the SDSS satellites are aligned preferentially with the major axes of the hosts. This is in stark contrast to the Holmberg effect, in which satellites are aligned with the minor axes of host galaxies. The degree of anisotropy in the distribution of the SDSS satellites decreases with rp and is consistent with an isotropic distribution at of order the 1 σ level for 250 kpc ≲ rp ≲ 500 kpc.

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10.1086/432713