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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The effects of photoionization on galaxy formation - II. Satellite galaxies in the Local Group

Abstract
We use a self-consistent model of galaxy formation and the evolution of the intergalactic medium to study the effects of the reionization of the Universe at high redshift on the properties of satellite galaxies like those seen around the Milky Way. Photoionization suppresses the formation of small galaxies, so that surviving satellites are preferentially those that formed before the Universe reionized. As a result, the number of satellites expected today is about an order of magnitude smaller than the number inferred by identifying satellites with subhaloes of the same circular velocity in high-resolution simulations of the dark matter. The resulting satellite population has an abundance similar to that observed in the Local Group, although the distribution of circular velocities differs somewhat from the available data. We explore many other properties of satellite galaxies, including their gas content, metallicity and star formation rate, and find generally good agreement with available data. Our model predicts the existence of many as yet undetected satellites in the Local Group. We quantify their observability in terms of their apparent magnitude and surface brightness, and also in terms of their constituent stars. A near-complete census of the Milky Way's satellites would require imaging to V≈20 and to a surface brightness fainter than 26 V-band magnitudes per square arcsecond. Satellites with integrated luminosity V=15 should contain of order 100 stars brighter than B=26, with central stellar densities of a few tens per square arcminute. Discovery of a large population of faint satellites would provide a strong test of current models of galaxy formation.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Breaking the hierarchy of galaxy formation

TL;DR: In this paper, a new implementation of the Durham semi-analytic model of galaxy formation in which feedback due to active galactic nuclei (AGN) is assumed to quench cooling flows in massive halos is discussed.
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The many lives of active galactic nuclei: cooling flows, black holes and the luminosities and colours of galaxies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors simulate the growth of galaxies and their central supermassive black holes by implementing a suite of semi-analytic models on the output of the Millennium Run, a very large simulation of the concordance A cold dark matter cosmogony.
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The Kinematics of the Ultra-faint Milky Way Satellites: Solving the Missing Satellite Problem

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured the velocities of stars in eight of the newly discovered ultra-faint dwarf galaxies around the Milky Way and found that the velocity dispersions were correlated with their luminosities, indicating that a minimum mass for luminous galactic systems may not yet have been reached.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Milky Way’s bright satellites as an apparent failure of ΛCDM

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the Aquarius simulations to show that the most massive subhaloes in galaxy-mass dark matter haloes in Λ cold dark matter (ΛCDM) are grossly inconsistent with the dynamics of the brightest Milky Way dwarf spheroidal galaxies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forming disc galaxies in ΛCDM simulations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used fully cosmological, high-resolution N-body + smooth particle hydrodynamic (SPH) simulations to follow the formation of disc galaxies with rotational velocities between 135 and 270km s -1 in a cold dark matter (CDM) universe.
References
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A Universal Density Profile from Hierarchical Clustering

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used high-resolution N-body simulations to study the equilibrium density profiles of dark matter halos in hierarchically clustering universes, and they found that all such profiles have the same shape, independent of the halo mass, the initial density fluctuation spectrum, and the values of the cosmological parameters.
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The Global Schmidt law in star forming galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, the Schmidt law was used to model the global star formation law over the full range of gas densities and star formation rates observed in galaxies, and the results showed that the SFR scales with the ratio of the gas density to the average orbital timescale.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Global Schmidt Law in Star Forming Galaxies

TL;DR: In this paper, the Schmidt law was used to model the global star formation law, over the full range of gas densities and star formation rates (SFRs) observed in galaxies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dark Matter Substructure within Galactic Halos

TL;DR: In this article, the substructure clumps are on orbits that take a large fraction of them through the stellar disk, leading to significant resonant and impulsive heating, and the model predicts that the virialized extent of the Milky Way's halo should contain about 500 satellites with circular velocities larger than the Draco and Ursa Minor systems, i.e., bound masses 108 M☉ and tidally limited sizes 1 kpc.
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