On the assembly of the Milky Way dwarf satellites and their common mass scale
Valery Rashkov, Piero Madau, Michael Kuhlen, and Jurg Diemand

TL;DR
This paper uses a particle tagging technique on high-resolution simulations to model Milky Way dwarf satellites, predicting their properties, common mass scale, and the existence of many faint, undetected satellites.
Contribution
It introduces a calibrated particle tagging method to reproduce observed satellite properties and predicts numerous faint satellites beyond current detection limits.
Findings
Reproduces observed properties of Milky Way satellites.
Predicts ~1,850 faint, undetected satellites.
Finds a nearly flat inner mass-luminosity relation with a weak positive correlation.
Abstract
We use a particle tagging technique to dynamically populate the N-body Via Lactea II high-resolution simulation with stars. The method is calibrated using the observed luminosity function of Milky Way satellites and the concentration of their stellar populations, and self-consistently follows the accretion and disruption of progenitor dwarfs and the build-up of the stellar halo in a cosmological "live host". Simple prescriptions for assigning stellar populations to collisionless particles are able to reproduce many properties of the observed Milky Way halo and its surviving dwarf satellites, like velocity dispersions, sizes, brightness profiles, metallicities, and spatial distribution. Our model predicts the existence of approximately 1,850 subhalos harboring "extremely faint" satellites (with mass-to-light ratios >5,000) lying beyond the Sloan Digital Sky Survey detection threshold. Of…
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