Sweating the small stuff: simulating dwarf galaxies, ultra-faint dwarf galaxies, and their own tiny satellites
Coral Wheeler (1), Jose Onorbe (2), James S. Bullock (1), Michael, Boylan-Kolchin (3), Oliver D. Elbert (1), Shea Garrison-Kimmel (1), Philip F., Hopkins (4), Dusan Keres (5) ((1) University of California, Irvine, (2) MPIA,, (3) University of Maryland, (4) Caltech

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to explore the formation and satellite systems of dwarf and ultra-faint galaxies, revealing that tiny satellites are common and can inform observational strategies.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulations of ultra-faint dwarf galaxies and their satellites, showing their prevalence and properties within cosmological halos.
Findings
Ultra-faint dwarfs form in halos with $M_{peak} \,\sim\ 0.5-3\times 10^9 M_{\odot}$.
Simulated ultra-faint galaxies have ancient stellar populations (>10 Gyr).
Targeting regions around nearby dwarfs can boost ultra-faint galaxy discovery by 35%.
Abstract
We present FIRE/Gizmo hydrodynamic zoom-in simulations of isolated dark matter halos, two each at the mass of classical dwarf galaxies () and ultra-faint galaxies (), and with two feedback implementations. The resultant central galaxies lie on an extrapolated abundance matching relation from to without a break. Every host is filled with subhalos, many of which form stars. Our dwarfs with each have 1-2 well-resolved satellites with . Even our isolated ultra-faint galaxies have star-forming subhalos. If this is representative, dwarf galaxies throughout the universe should commonly host tiny satellite galaxies of their own. We combine our results with the ELVIS simulations to show that targeting $\sim…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
