Baryonic impact on the dark matter distribution in Milky Way-size galaxies and their satellites
Qirong Zhu, Federico Marinacci, Moupiya Maji, Yuexing Li, Volker, Springel, Lars Hernquist

TL;DR
This study compares hydrodynamic and dark matter-only simulations of Milky Way-sized halos to assess how baryonic processes like adiabatic contraction, tidal disruption, and reionization influence dark matter distribution and subhalo populations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of baryonic effects on dark matter and subhalos, highlighting the importance of including these processes in galaxy formation models.
Findings
Baryons significantly alter dark matter distribution in halos and subhalos.
Reionization reduces low-mass subhalo mass and velocity.
The number of low-mass subhalos is nearly halved due to baryonic effects.
Abstract
We study the impact of baryons on the distribution of dark matter in a Milky Way-size halo by comparing a high-resolution, moving-mesh cosmological simulation with its dark matter-only counterpart. We identify three main processes related to baryons -- adiabatic contraction, tidal disruption and reionization -- which jointly shape the dark matter distribution in both the main halo and its subhalos. The relative effect of each baryonic process depends strongly on the subhalo mass. For massive subhalos with maximum circular velocity , adiabatic contraction increases the dark matter concentration, making these halos less susceptible to tidal disruption. For low-mass subhalos with , reionization effectively reduces their mass on average by 30% and by 20%. For intermediate subhalos with $20 km/s < v_{\rm max} <…
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