Environmental mechanisms shaping the nature of dwarf spheroidal galaxies; the view of computer simulations
Lucio Mayer (Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of Zurich)

TL;DR
This paper reviews how environmental mechanisms like gas stripping and tidal forces influence dwarf spheroidal galaxies' evolution, highlighting the role of cosmic reionization and star formation efficiency in shaping their properties.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive model explaining dwarf spheroidal formation through environmental effects, emphasizing the importance of gas stripping and tidal stirring, and distinguishes ultra-faint dSphs as reionization fossils.
Findings
Gas stripping and tidal stirring transform dwarf galaxies into spheroids.
Ultra-faint dSphs are likely shaped by reionization, not environmental mechanisms.
Reionization fossils are distinct from other dwarf satellites.
Abstract
We review numerical work carried out over the last decade on the role of environmental mechanisms in shaping the nature of the faintest galaxies known, dwarf spheroidals (dSphs). In particular we discuss a model in which dSphs originated from gas dominated, disky dwarfs that were accreted by massive galaxies several billions of years ago. Dwarfs accreting at , when the cosmic ultraviolet ionizing flux was much higher than today and was thus able to keep the gas in the dwarfs warm and diffuse, were rapidly stripped of their baryons via ram pressure and tidal forces, producing very dark matter dominated objects with truncated star formation histories, such as the Draco dSph. The low star formation efficiency expected in such low-metallicity objects prior to their infall was crucial for keeping their disks gas dominated until stripping took over. {\it Therefore gas stripping along…
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