The Formation of Fossil Galaxy Groups in the hierarchical Universe
Abstract
We use a set of twelve high-resolution N-body/hydrodynamical simulations in the cosmology to investigate the origin and formation rate of fossil groups (FGs), which are X-ray bright galaxy groups dominated by a large elliptical galaxy, with the second brightest galaxy being at least two magnitudes fainter. The simulations invoke star formation, chemical evolution with non-instantaneous recycling, metal dependent radiative cooling, strong star burst driven galactic super winds, effects of a meta-galactic UV field and full stellar population synthesis. We find an interesting correlation between the magnitude gap between the first and second brightest galaxy and the formation time of the group. It is found that FGs have assembled half of their final dark matter mass already at z1, and subsequently typically grow by minor merging only, wheras non-FGs on average form later. The early assembly of FGs leaves sufficient time for galaxies of L L* to merge into the central one by dynamical friction, resulting in the large magnitude gap at z=0. A fraction of 3316% of the groups simulated are found to be fossil, whereas the observational estimate is 10-20%. The FGs are found to be X-ray over-luminous relative to non-FGs of the same optical luminosity, in qualitative agreement with observations. Finally, from a dynamical friction analysis is found that only because infall of L L* galaxies happens along filaments with small impact parameters do FGs exist at all.
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