Another baryon miracle? Testing solutions to the "missing dwarfs" problem
Sebastian Trujillo-Gomez, Aurel Schneider, Emmanouil Papastergis,, Darren S. Reed, George Lake

TL;DR
This study evaluates the discrepancy between observed dwarf galaxy abundance and CDM predictions, finding that baryonic feedback alone cannot fully resolve the missing dwarfs problem, highlighting the need for alternative solutions.
Contribution
It introduces a new galactic maximum circular velocity function derived from kinematic data, providing a direct comparison between observations and theoretical models.
Findings
The galactic Vmax function is steeper than the line-of-sight velocity function.
Neither feedback nor photoevaporation fully reconcile the discrepancy.
CDM overpredicts dwarf galaxy numbers at low Vmax.
Abstract
The dearth of dwarf galaxies in the local universe is hard to reconcile with the large number of low mass haloes expected within the concordance CDM paradigm. In this paper we perform a systematic evaluation of the uncertainties affecting the measurement of DM halo abundance using galaxy kinematics. Using a large sample of dwarf galaxies with spatially resolved kinematic data we derive a correction to obtain the observed abundance of galaxies as a function of their halo maximum circular velocity from the line-of-sight velocity function in the Local Volume. This estimate provides a direct means of comparing the predictions of theoretical models and simulations (including nonstandard cosmologies and novel galaxy formation physics) to the observational constraints. The new "galactic " function is steeper than the line-of-sight velocity function but still shallower than…
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