Too Many, Too Few, or Just Right? The Predicted Number and Distribution of Milky Way Dwarf Galaxies
Jonathan R. Hargis, Beth Willman, Annika H. G. Peter

TL;DR
This paper predicts the number and distribution of Milky Way dwarf galaxies detectable by upcoming surveys like DES and LSST, using models and simulations to refine previous estimates and highlight potential discoveries.
Contribution
It introduces updated predictions for dwarf galaxy counts based on new detection limits and models, improving upon prior estimates and aiding future survey planning.
Findings
Predicted 37-114 large dwarfs within 300 kpc at 90% confidence.
Predicted 131-782 smaller dwarfs within 300 kpc at 90% confidence.
Significantly lower counts than previous estimates due to updated detection limits.
Abstract
We predict the spatial distribution and number of Milky Way dwarf galaxies to be discovered in the DES and LSST surveys, by completeness correcting the observed SDSS dwarf population. We apply most massive in the past, earliest forming, and earliest infall toy models to a set of dark matter-only simulated Milky Way/M31 halo pairs from Exploring the Local Volume In Simulations (ELVIS). The observed spatial distribution of Milky Way dwarfs in the LSST-era will discriminate between the earliest infall and other simplified models for how dwarf galaxies populate dark matter subhalos. Inclusive of all toy models and simulations, at 90% confidence we predict a total of 37-114 L L dwarfs and 131-782 L L dwarfs within 300 kpc. These numbers of L L dwarfs are dramatically lower than previous predictions, owing primarily to…
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