Satellites in the Local Group and Other Nearby Groups
Eva K. Grebel (ARI/ZAH, Heidelberg University)

TL;DR
Recent wide-area surveys and advanced observations have significantly expanded our knowledge of satellite galaxies in the Local Group and nearby groups, revealing complex star formation histories, chemical evolution, and dark matter properties.
Contribution
This paper compiles recent observational advances, highlighting new insights into satellite galaxy properties, star formation, and dark matter content in the Local Group and nearby groups.
Findings
Surveys have doubled known satellite galaxies in the Local Group.
Evidence of multiple stellar populations within satellites.
Dark matter dominates satellite kinematics, but mass scale relations are complex.
Abstract
In recent years the census of known satellites in our own Local Group and in nearby galaxy groups has increased substantially due to sensitive wide-area surveys. In the Local Group these surveys have more than doubled its known galaxy content and extended the galaxy luminosity function to very faint total magnitudes. Deep ground-based imaging and spectroscopic observations as well as high-resolution imaging with the Hubble Space Telescope have revolutionized our understanding of the chemical evolution and star formation histories of the satellites. We often find long-lasting star formation episodes with low star formation efficiencies. There is evidence for localized, stochastic enrichment, and recent searches are now beginning to uncover even extremely metal-deficient stars. In many satellites evidence for two or more distinct stellar subpopulations is found. Differing fractions of old…
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