Near-Field Limits on the Role of Faint Galaxies in Cosmic Reionization
Michael Boylan-Kolchin, James S. Bullock, Shea Garrison-Kimmel

TL;DR
This paper argues that the number of faint galaxies needed for cosmic reionization conflicts with local galaxy counts, suggesting star formation was inefficient in small halos at high redshift.
Contribution
It introduces simple models and simulation analysis showing the tension between reionization requirements and observed local galaxy populations.
Findings
Reionization models requiring star formation in small halos predict too many satellite galaxies.
Most faint galaxies driving reionization are likely below current detection thresholds.
Star formation in halos smaller than ~10^9 M_sun was probably highly inefficient at high redshift.
Abstract
Reionizing the Universe with galaxies appears to require significant star formation in low-mass halos at early times, while local dwarf galaxy counts tell us that star formation has been minimal in small halos around us today. Using simple models and the ELVIS simulation suite, we show that reionization scenarios requiring appreciable star formation in halos with at are in serious tension with galaxy counts in the Local Group. This tension originates from the seemingly inescapable conclusion that 30 - 60 halos with at will survive to be distinct bound satellites of the Milky Way at . Reionization models requiring star formation in such halos will produce dozens of bound galaxies in the Milky Way's virial volume today (and 100 - 200 throughout the Local Group), each with $\gtrsim…
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