Exploring the links between star formation and minor companions around isolated galaxies
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that galaxies with minor companions exhibit an elevated star formation rate. We reverse this inquiry, constructing a volume-limited sample of (Mr ≤ -19.5 + 5 log h) galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey that are isolated with respect to other luminous galaxies. Cosmological simulations suggest that 99.8% of these galaxies are alone in their dark matter haloes with respect to other luminous galaxies. We search the area around these galaxies for photometric companions. Matching strongly star forming (EW(Hα)≥ 35 ) and quiescent (EW(Hα)< 35 ) samples for stellar mass and redshift using a Monte Carlo resampling technique, we demonstrate that rapidly star-forming galaxies are more likely to have photometric companions than other galaxies. The effect is relatively small; about 11% of quiescent, isolated galaxies have minor photometric companions at radii ≤ 60 kpc h-1 kpc while about 16% of strongly star-forming ones do. Though small, the cumulative difference in satellite counts between strongly star-forming and quiescent galaxies is highly statistically significant (PKS = 1.350 ×10-3) out to to radii of 100 h-1 kpc. We discuss explanations for this excess, including the possibility that 5% of strongly star-forming galaxies have star formation that is causally related to the presence of a minor companion.
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