A quantitative explanation of the observed population of Milky Way satellite galaxies
Sergey E. Koposov (1,2,3), Jaiyul Yoo (4), Hans-Walter Rix (1), David, H. Weinberg (5), Andrea V. Macci\`o (1), Jordi Miralda-Escud\'e (6) ((1) Max, Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg, Germany, (2) Institute of, Astronomy, Cambridge, UK

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that by incorporating suppression of star formation before and after reionization, the observed Milky Way satellite galaxies can be explained within the cold dark matter model, resolving the missing satellite problem.
Contribution
It introduces a physically motivated model that accounts for star formation suppression, successfully matching observed satellite counts and properties within the CDM framework.
Findings
Models with reionization suppression match observed satellite counts
Pre-reionization suppression is necessary to avoid overprediction
Model satellites have consistent velocity dispersions and mass profiles
Abstract
We revisit the well known discrepancy between the observed number of Milky Way (MW) dwarf satellite companions and the predicted population of cold dark matter (CDM) sub-halos, in light of the dozen new low luminosity satellites found in SDSS imaging data and our recent calibration of the SDSS satellite detection efficiency, which implies a total population far larger than these dozen discoveries. We combine a dynamical model for the CDM sub-halo population with simple, physically motivated prescriptions for assigning stellar content to each sub-halo, then apply observational selection effects and compare to the current observational census. As expected, models in which the stellar mass is a constant fraction F(Omega_b/Omega_m) of the sub-halo mass M_sat at the time it becomes a satellite fail for any choice of F. However, previously advocated models that invoke suppression of gas…
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