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Published January 2017 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Organized Chaos: Scatter in the relation between stellar mass and halo mass in small galaxies

Abstract

We use Local Group galaxy counts together with the ELVIS N-body simulations to explore the relationship between the scatter and slope in the stellar mass versus halo mass relation at low masses, M⋆ ≃ 10^5–10^8 M⊙. Assuming models with lognormal scatter about a median relation of the form M⋆ ∝ M^α_(halo), the preferred log-slope steepens from α ≃ 1.8 in the limit of zero scatter to α ≃ 2.6 in the case of 2 dex of scatter in M⋆ at fixed halo mass. We provide fitting functions for the best-fitting relations as a function of scatter, including cases where the relation becomes increasingly stochastic with decreasing mass. We show that if the scatter at fixed halo mass is large enough (≳ 1 dex) and if the median relation is steep enough (α ≳ 2), then the 'too-big-to-fail' problem seen in the Local Group can be self-consistently eliminated in about ∼5–10 per cent of realizations. This scenario requires that the most massive subhaloes host unobservable ultra-faint dwarfs fairly often; we discuss potentially observable signatures of these systems. Finally, we compare our derived constraints to recent high-resolution simulations of dwarf galaxy formation in the literature. Though simulation-to-simulation scatter in M⋆ at fixed M_(halo) is large among different authors (∼2 dex), individual codes produce relations with much less scatter and usually give relations that would overproduce local galaxy counts.

Additional Information

© 2016 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. Accepted 2016 October 5. Received 2016 October 4; in original form 2016 March 8; Editorial Decision 2016 October 4. The authors thank Michael Cooper, Marla Geha, Coral Wheeler, Jose Oñorbe, Ferah Munshi, Erik Tollerud, Frank van den Bosch, Andrew Wetzel, Massimo Ricotti, Phil Hopkins, Justin Read, and the anonymous referee for valuable comments that have improved the manuscript. We also thank Aaron Dutton for providing the NIHAO data. Support for SGK was provided by NASA through Einstein Postdoctoral Fellowship grant number PF5-160136 awarded by the Chandra X-ray Center, which is operated by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory for NASA under contract NAS8-03060. MBK acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation (grant AST-1517226) and from NASA through HST theory grants (programmes AR-12836 and AR-13888) awarded by the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI), which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA), Inc., under NASA contract NAS5-26555. We also acknowledge the support of the Greenplanet cluster at UCI, where much of the analysis was performed. This work also made use of matplotlib (Hunter 2007), astropy (Astropy Collaboration et al. 2013), numpy (van der Walt, Colbert & Varoquaux 2011), scipy (Jones et al. 01), and ipython (Perez & Granger 2007). This research has made use of NASA's Astrophysics Data System.

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Published - stw2564.pdf

Submitted - 1603.04855v2.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023