Ultrafaint Dwarf Galaxies - the lowest mass relics from before reionization
Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Ralph Sutherland, David Webster

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that ultrafaint dwarf galaxies can form before reionization from very low-mass dark matter halos, and that supernova feedback in a clumpy medium allows these galaxies to retain gas and form stars.
Contribution
The study provides new simulations showing that dark matter halos as low as 10^7 solar masses can retain gas and form stars after supernovae, challenging previous mass estimates.
Findings
Low-mass halos (~10^7 Msun) can survive supernova feedback.
Clumpy gas medium reduces energy coupling and aids gas retention.
Simulations match properties of local ultrafaint dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
New observations indicate that ultrafaint dwarf galaxies (UFD) -- the least luminous systems bound by dark matter halos (<10^5 Lsun) -- may have formed before reionization. The extrapolated virial masses today are uncertain with estimates ranging from 10^8 Msun to 10^9 Msun. We show that the progenitor halo masses of UFDs can be as low as Mvir = 10^7 Msun. Under the right conditions, such a halo can survive the energy input of a supernova and its radiative progenitor. A clumpy medium is much less susceptible to both internal and external injections of energy. It is less prone to SN sweeping because the coupling efficiency of the explosive energy is much lower than for a diffuse ISM. With the aid of the 3D hydro/ionization code Fyris, we show that sufficient baryons are retained to form stars following a single supernova event in dark matter halos down to Mvir ~ 10^7 Msun with radiative…
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