The Aquarius Project: the subhalos of galactic halos
Volker Springel (1), Jie Wang (1), Mark Vogelsberger (1), Aaron Ludlow, (2), Adrian Jenkins (3), Amina Helmi (4), Julio F. Navarro (2,5), Carlos S., Frenk (3), Simon D. M. White (1) ((1) MPA, (2) UVic, (3) Durham, (4), Groningen, (5) UMass)

TL;DR
This study uses large-scale simulations to analyze the properties and distribution of subhalos within Milky Way-sized dark matter halos, revealing detailed substructure statistics and density profiles.
Contribution
It provides the most comprehensive convergence study of a Milky Way-sized halo and its subhalos, including the first detailed analysis of subhalo internal structures and halo-to-halo variations.
Findings
Nearly 300,000 subhalos resolved in the largest simulation
Substructure mass fraction is below 3% within 100 kpc
Subhalos are more concentrated than field halos
Abstract
We have performed the largest ever particle simulation of a Milky Way-sized dark matter halo, and present the most comprehensive convergence study for an individual dark matter halo carried out thus far. We have also simulated a sample of 6 ultra-highly resolved Milky-way sized halos, allowing us to estimate the halo-to-halo scatter in substructure statistics. In our largest simulation, we resolve nearly 300,000 gravitationally bound subhalos within the virialized region of the halo. Simulations of the same object differing in mass resolution by factors up to 1800 accurately reproduce the largest subhalos with the same mass, maximum circular velocity and position, and yield good convergence for the abundance and internal properties of dark matter substructures. We detect up to four generations of subhalos within subhalos, but contrary to recent claims, we find less substructure in…
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