Satellite galaxies in hydrodynamical simulations of Milky Way sized galaxies
M. Wadepuhl, V. Springel

TL;DR
This study uses advanced hydrodynamical simulations including cosmic rays and black hole feedback to better match observed satellite galaxies of the Milky Way, addressing the missing satellite problem.
Contribution
First to incorporate cosmic ray feedback and black hole energy input in high-resolution simulations to explain the faint satellite population.
Findings
Cosmic ray feedback suppresses star formation in small galaxies.
Models with cosmic rays match the faint-end luminosity function.
Simulated satellites align with observed kinematic and spatial data.
Abstract
Collisionless simulations of the CDM cosmology predict a plethora of dark matter substructures in the halos of Milky Way sized galaxies, yet the number of known luminous satellites galaxies is very much smaller, a discrepancy that has become known as the `missing satellite problem'. The most massive substructures have been shown to be plausibly the hosts of the brightest satellites, but it remains unclear which processes prevent star formation in the many other, purely dark substructures. We use high-resolution hydrodynamic simulations of the formation of Milky Way sized galaxies in order to test how well such self-consistent models of structure formation match the observed properties of the Galaxy's satellite population. For the first time, we include in such calculations feedback from cosmic rays injected into the star forming gas by supernovae as well as the energy input from…
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