The Local Group: The Ultimate Deep Field
Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Daniel R. Weisz, James S. Bullock, Michael C., Cooper

TL;DR
This paper argues that the Local Group's early progenitors span a large enough volume at high redshift to serve as a representative cosmic sample, offering unique insights into galaxy evolution and dark matter physics.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the Local Group's early universe region is sufficiently large and representative, supporting its use as a valuable near-field cosmology probe complementary to deep field surveys.
Findings
The early progenitor region of the Local Group reaches 7 Mpc at z=7.
This region contains a representative sample of dark matter halos and galaxy populations.
The Local Group fossil record complements deep field observations like the HUDF.
Abstract
Near-field cosmology -- using detailed observations of the Local Group and its environs to study wide-ranging questions in galaxy formation and dark matter physics -- has become a mature and rich field over the past decade. There are lingering concerns, however, that the relatively small size of the present-day Local Group ( Mpc diameter) imposes insurmountable sample-variance uncertainties, limiting its broader utility. We consider the region spanned by the Local Group's progenitors at earlier times and show that it reaches co-moving Mpc in linear size (a volume of ) at . This size at early cosmic epochs is large enough to be representative in terms of the matter density and counts of dark matter halos with . The Local Group's stellar fossil record traces the cosmic evolution of…
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