Addressing the too big to fail problem with baryon physics and sterile neutrino dark matter
Mark R. Lovell (MPIA, UvA, Leiden), Violeta Gonzalez-Perez (ICG, Portsmouth), Sownak Bose (Durham), Alexey Boyarsky (Leiden), Shaun Cole, (Durham), Carlos S. Frenk (Durham), Oleg Ruchayskiy (Copenhagen, EPFL)

TL;DR
This study investigates solutions to the 'too big to fail' problem in galaxy formation by testing baryonic effects, halo mass, and sterile neutrino dark matter using semi-analytic models, finding sterile neutrinos improve agreement with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytic approach to evaluate how baryonic physics, halo mass, and sterile neutrino dark matter address the 'too big to fail' problem in galaxy satellites.
Findings
Selecting brightest satellites increases model accuracy.
Preferred halo mass is around 6×10^11 M_sun.
Sterile neutrino models better match observed satellite velocities.
Abstract
N-body dark matter simulations of structure formation in the CDM model predict a population of subhalos within Galactic halos that have higher central densities than inferred for satellites of the Milky Way, a tension known as the `too big to fail' problem. Proposed solutions include baryonic effects, a smaller mass for the Milky Way halo, and warm dark matter. We test these three possibilities using a semi-analytic model of galaxy formation to generate luminosity functions for Milky Way halo-analogue satellite populations, the results of which are then coupled to the Jiang & van den Bosch model of subhalo stripping to predict the subhalo functions for the 10 brightest satellites. We find that selecting the brightest satellites (as opposed to the most massive) and modelling the expulsion of gas by supernovae at early times increases the likelihood of generating…
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