The Kinematics of the Ultra-Faint Milky Way Satellites: Solving the Missing Satellite Problem
Joshua D. Simon (Caltech), Marla Geha (HIA/DAO)

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopic data of ultra-faint dwarf galaxies around the Milky Way to measure their masses, metallicities, and velocity dispersions, providing insights into the missing satellite problem and galaxy formation.
Contribution
It presents new velocity and metallicity measurements of ultra-faint dwarfs, linking their properties to dark matter models and addressing the missing satellite problem.
Findings
Ultra-faint dwarfs are highly dark matter-dominated.
Velocity dispersions inversely correlate with luminosity.
Correcting for sky coverage reduces the satellite discrepancy.
Abstract
We present Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy of stars in 8 of the newly discovered ultra-faint dwarf galaxies around the Milky Way. We measure the velocity dispersions of Canes Venatici I and II, Ursa Major I and II, Coma Berenices, Hercules, Leo IV and Leo T from the velocities of 18 - 214 stars in each galaxy and find dispersions ranging from 3.3 to 7.6 km/s. The 6 galaxies with absolute magnitudes M_V < -4 are highly dark matter-dominated, with mass-to-light ratios approaching 1000. The measured velocity dispersions are inversely correlated with their luminosities, indicating that a minimum mass for luminous galactic systems may not yet have been reached. We also measure the metallicities of the observed stars and find that the 6 brightest of the ultra-faint dwarfs extend the luminosity-metallicity relationship followed by brighter dwarfs by 2 orders of magnitude in luminosity; several of…
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