Cold dark matter subhaloes at arbitrarily low masses
Nicola C. Amorisco

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that low-mass cold dark matter subhaloes can be stripped to arbitrarily small masses through tidal interactions, supporting their persistent existence as a fundamental prediction of the CDM model.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical model for tidal evolution of subhaloes, showing their structural properties at any mass loss level, regardless of initial mass.
Findings
Subhaloes can be stripped to arbitrarily low masses.
Tidal heating is negligible across all masses.
Subhalo populations extend to very low masses, confirming CDM predictions.
Abstract
A defining prediction of the cold dark matter (CDM) cosmological model is the existence of a very large population of low mass haloes, down to planet-size masses. However, their fate as they are accreted onto haloes many orders of magnitude more massive remains fundamentally uncertain. A number of numerical explorations have found subhaloes to be very resilient to tides, but resolution limits make it difficult to explore tidal evolution at arbitrarily low masses. What are the structural properties of heavily stripped subhaloes? Do tidal effects destroy low-mass CDM subhaloes? Here we focus on cosmologically motivated subhaloes orbiting CDM hosts, and show that subhaloes of any initial mass can be stripped to arbitrarily small mass fractions. We show that previous numerical results can be reproduced by a simple model that describes tidal evolution as a progressive `peeling' in energy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
