The population of Milky Way satellites in the LambdaCDM cosmology
Andreea S. Font, Andrew J. Benson, Richard G. Bower, Carlos F. Frenk,, Andrew P. Cooper, Gabriella De Lucia, John C. Helly, Amina Helmi, Yang-Shyang, Li, Ian G. McCarthy, Julio F. Navarro, Volker Springel, Else Starkenburg, Jie, Wang

TL;DR
This paper models the Milky Way's satellite galaxies within the LambdaCDM framework using semi-analytic techniques applied to high-resolution simulations, successfully reproducing observed satellite properties and their variation.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed semi-analytic model that incorporates improved physics, including self-consistent reionization, to accurately simulate satellite galaxy populations in LambdaCDM.
Findings
Model matches satellite luminosity functions and metallicity relations.
Reproduces radial distribution and mass within 300 pc.
Shows significant variation among different halos.
Abstract
We present a model for the satellites of the Milky Way in which galaxy formation is followed using semi-analytic techniques applied to the six high-resolution N-body simulations of galactic halos of the Aquarius project. The model, calculated using the Galform code, incorporates improved treatments of the relevant physics in the LambdaCDM cosmogony, particularly a self-consistent calculation of reionization by UV photons emitted by the forming galaxy population, including the progenitors of the central galaxy. Along the merger tree of each halo, the model calculates gas cooling (by Compton scattering off cosmic microwave background photons, molecular hydrogen and atomic processes), gas heating (from hydrogen photoionization and supernova energy), star formation and evolution. The evolution of the intergalactic medium is followed simultaneously with that of the galaxies. Star formation…
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