Mechanisms of Baryon Loss for Dark Satellites in Cosmological SPH Simulations
S. Nickerson, G. Stinson, H. M. P. Couchman, J. Bailin, J. Wadsley

TL;DR
This study investigates how baryonic processes like UV radiation, ram pressure, tidal forces, and stellar feedback influence the visibility and mass loss of satellite galaxies in cosmological SPH simulations, addressing the missing satellite problem.
Contribution
It identifies the dominant baryonic mechanisms affecting satellite galaxy evolution and clarifies their roles in the observed luminous versus dark satellite populations.
Findings
UV radiation causes most baryon loss in low-mass satellites
Tidal forces significantly strip mass during close passages to the main halo
Stellar feedback impacts medium-mass satellites by removing their gas
Abstract
We present a study of satellites in orbit around a high-resolution, smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) galaxy simulated in a cosmological context. The simulated galaxy is approximately the same mass as the Milky Way. The cumulative number of luminous satellites at z = 0 is similar to the observed system of satellites orbiting the Milky Way although an analysis of the satellite mass function reveals an order of magnitude more dark satellites than luminous. Some of the dark subhalos are more massive than some of the luminous subhalos at z = 0. What separates luminous and dark subhalos is not their mass at z = 0, but the maximum mass the subhalos ever achieve. We study the effect of four mass loss mechanisms on the subhalos: ultraviolet (UV) ionising radiation, ram pressure stripping, tidal stripping, and stellar feedback, and compare the impact of each of these four mechanisms on the…
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