The connection between the host halo and the satellite galaxies of the Milky Way
Yu Lu, Andrew Benson, Yao-Yuan Mao, Stephanie Tonnesen, Annika H. G., Peter, Andrew R. Wetzel, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Risa H. Wechsler

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the properties of the Milky Way's dark matter halo, especially its assembly history and subhalo population, are connected to the presence of Magellanic Cloud-like satellites, using simulations and galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It demonstrates the correlation between Magellanic Clouds and halo properties and shows how these influence galaxy formation modeling and observable satellite characteristics.
Findings
Magellanic Clouds presence correlates with lower halo concentration and recent accretion.
Different halo assembly histories affect galaxy formation model parameters.
Presence of Magellanic Clouds impacts satellite mass and metallicity relations.
Abstract
Many properties of the Milky Way's dark matter halo, including its mass assembly history, concentration, and subhalo population, remain poorly constrained. We explore the connection between these properties of the Milky Way and its satellite galaxy population, especially the implication of the presence of the Magellanic Clouds for the properties of the Milky Way halo. Using a suite of high-resolution -body simulations of Milky Way-mass halos with a fixed final Mvir ~ 10^{12.1}Msun, we find that the presence of Magellanic Cloud-like satellites strongly correlates with the assembly history, concentration, and subhalo population of the host halo, such that Milky Way-mass systems with Magellanic Clouds have lower concentration, more rapid recent accretion, and more massive subhalos than typical halos of the same mass. Using a flexible semi-analytic galaxy formation model that is tuned to…
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