The Merian Survey: A Statistical Census of Bright Satellites of Milky Way Analogs
Abstract
We present a statistical census of bright, star-forming satellite galaxies around Milky Way (MW) analogs using the first data release of the Merian Survey. Our sample consists of 393 MW analogs with stellar masses 1010.5 < M, host < 1010.9 M at redshifts 0.07 < z < 0.09, all central galaxies of their own dark matter halos. Using photometric selection -- including magnitude, color, angular size, photometric redshift, and size-mass cuts -- we identify 793 satellite candidates around these 393 hosts. Our selection leverages two medium-band filters targeting Hα and [O iii] emission, enabling a nearly complete sample of star-forming, Magellanic Clouds-like satellites with M, sat 108 M. We find that 80\% of hosts have 0-3 massive satellites, and 134\% have two satellites (similar to the MW). Satellite abundance correlates with total stellar mass, and we provide significantly improved statistics for the most massive satellites at 10[M, sat/M] 10. The completeness-corrected radial distribution is less centrally concentrated than an NFW profile. In contrast, the Milky Way satellites are more centrally concentrated than the 50\% richest Merian systems, but are broadly consistent with the 50\% most centrally concentrated Merian systems. Our results highlight the power of medium-band photometry for satellite identification and provide a key benchmark for studying satellite quenching, environmental effects, and hierarchical galaxy formation.
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