What Sets the Sizes of the Faintest Galaxies?
Crystal M. Brasseur (1), Nicolas F. Martin (1), Andrea V. Macci\`o, (1), Hans-Walter Rix (1), Xi Kang (2) ((1) Max Planck Institute for, Astronomy, Heidelberg, (2) The Purple Mountain Observatory, Nanjing)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the sizes of the faintest galaxies, the dwarf spheroidals, revealing their size-luminosity relation, and proposes that their sizes are linked to initial angular momentum, supported by simulations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive size-luminosity relation for dSphs and links their sizes to initial baryonic angular momentum through simulations.
Findings
Size-luminosity relation is statistically similar for Milky Way and Andromeda dSphs.
The size distribution matches that of more massive low-concentration galaxies.
Simulations predict the observed size-luminosity relation based on angular momentum.
Abstract
We provide a comprehensive description and offer an explanation for the sizes of the faintest known galaxies in the universe, the dwarf spheroidal (dSph) satellites of the Milky Way and Andromeda. After compiling a consistent data set of half-light radii (r_{1/2}) and luminosities, we describe the size-luminosity relation of dSphs by a log-normal distribution in r_{1/2} with a mean size that varies as a function of luminosity. Accounting for modest number statistics, measurement uncertainties and surface brightness limitations, we find that the size-luminosity relations of the Milky Way and Andromeda dSph populations are statistically indistinguishable, and also very similar: their mean sizes at a given stellar luminosity differ by no more than 30%. In addition, we find that the mean size, slope and scatter of this log-normal size description of Local Group dSphs matches onto the…
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