Selecting ultra-faint dwarf candidate progenitors in cosmological N-body simulations at high redshifts
Mohammadtaher Safarzadeh, Alexander P. Ji, Gregory A. Dooley, Anna, Frebel, Evan Scannapieco, Facundo A. G\'omez, Brian W. O'Shea

TL;DR
This study identifies high-redshift progenitors of ultra-faint dwarf galaxies using cosmological simulations, enabling efficient selection of potential UFD hosts without expensive low-redshift simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a method to statistically select UFD progenitors at high redshifts based on mass, location, and virial ratios, reducing computational costs.
Findings
Selecting halos at z=12 with certain masses yields 10-20% chance of survival as UFDs.
Progenitors of surviving UFDs tend to have lower virial ratios and be located farther from the main galaxy.
Halos with favorable properties are about three times more likely to survive as UFDs.
Abstract
The smallest satellites of the Milky Way ceased forming stars during the epoch of reionization and thus provide archaeological access to galaxy formation at . Numerical studies of these ultra-faint dwarf galaxies (UFDs) require expensive cosmological simulations with high mass resolution that are carried out down to . However, if we are able to statistically identify UFD host progenitors at high redshifts \emph{with relatively high probabilities}, we can avoid this high computational cost. To find such candidates, we analyze the merger trees of Milky Way type halos from the high-resolution suite of dark matter only simulations. Satellite UFD hosts at are identified based on four different abundance matching (AM) techniques. All the halos at high redshifts are traced forward in time in order to compute the probability of surviving as satellite UFDs…
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