Orbital pericenters and the inferred dark matter halo structure of satellite galaxies
Victor H. Robles, James S. Bullock

TL;DR
This study uses simulations and Gaia data to link satellite galaxy orbits with their dark matter structures, refining mass estimates and highlighting stochastic galaxy formation at low stellar masses.
Contribution
It demonstrates the correlation between orbital pericenters and dark matter halo properties, improving constraints on satellite galaxy mass estimates using Gaia data.
Findings
Smaller pericenters correlate with more concentrated halos.
Pericenter data refines estimates of $V_{max}$ and $V_{peak}$ for satellites.
No correlation between $V_{peak}$ and stellar mass at low masses.
Abstract
Using the phat-ELVIS suite of Milky Way-size halo simulations, we show that subhalo orbital pericenters, , correlate with their dark matter halo structural properties. Specifically, at fixed maximum circular velocity, , subhalos with smaller are more concentrated (have smaller values) and have lost more mass, with larger peak circular velocities, , prior to infall. These trends provide information that can tighten constraints on the inferred and values for known Milky Way satellites. We illustrate this using published pericenter estimates enabled by Gaia for the nine classical Milky Way dwarf spheroidal satellites. The two densest dSph satellites (Draco and Ursa Minor) have relatively small pericenters, and this pushes their inferred and values lower than they…
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