Reconciling dwarf galaxies with LCDM cosmology: Simulating a realistic population of satellites around a Milky Way-mass galaxy
Andrew R. Wetzel, Philip F. Hopkins, Ji-hoon Kim, Claude-Andre, Faucher-Giguere, Dusan Keres, Eliot Quataert

TL;DR
This paper presents high-resolution cosmological simulations of Milky Way-like galaxies that successfully reproduce the observed properties of dwarf galaxies, addressing longstanding small-scale structure issues in LCDM cosmology.
Contribution
The study introduces the Latte simulation, which models dwarf galaxy formation around a MW-mass galaxy with unprecedented resolution, resolving scales relevant to dwarf galaxy half-light radii and matching observed properties.
Findings
Dwarf galaxy populations match Local Group observations in mass and velocity dispersion.
The simulations reproduce the observed mass-metallicity relation.
The results show a diverse range of star formation histories consistent with observations.
Abstract
Low-mass "dwarf" galaxies represent the most significant challenges to the cold dark matter (CDM) model of cosmological structure formation. Because these faint galaxies are (best) observed within the Local Group (LG) of the Milky Way (MW) and Andromeda (M31), understanding their formation in such an environment is critical. We present first results from the Latte Project: the Milky Way on FIRE (Feedback in Realistic Environments). This simulation models the formation of a MW-mass galaxy to z = 0 within LCDM cosmology, including dark matter, gas, and stars at unprecedented resolution: baryon particle mass of 7070 Msun with gas kernel/softening that adapts down to 1 pc (with a median of 25 - 60 pc at z = 0). Latte was simulated using the GIZMO code with a mesh-free method for accurate hydrodynamics and the FIRE-2 model for star formation and explicit feedback within a multi-phase…
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