Survivors and Zombies: The Quenching and Disruption of Satellites around Milky Way Analogs
Debosmita Pathak, Charlotte R. Christensen, Alyson M. Brooks, Ferah Munshi, Anna C. Wright, Courtney Carter

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to analyze the accretion, quenching, and disruption of satellite galaxies around Milky Way-like galaxies, revealing correlations with infall time, mass, and orbital dynamics.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the full accretion history of the Milky Way, including the survival and disruption patterns of satellites based on detailed simulation data.
Findings
Disrupted satellites are generally older and more metal-rich.
Survival probability decreases with earlier infall times and higher radial orbits.
Most ultra-faint dwarfs survive until present, often quenching before accretion.
Abstract
It is necessary to understand the full accretion history of the Milky Way in order to contextualize the properties of observed Milky Way satellite galaxies and the stellar halo. This paper compares the dynamical properties and star-formation histories of surviving and disrupted satellites around Milky Way-like galaxies using the DC Justice League suite of very high-resolution cosmological zoom-in simulations of Milky Way analogs and their halo environments. We analyze the full census of galaxies accreted within the past 12 Gyrs, which including both surviving satellites at , and dwarf galaxies that disrupted and merged with the host prior to . Our simulations successfully reproduce the trends in -[Fe/H]-[/Fe] observed in surviving Milky Way satellites and disrupted stellar streams, indicating earlier star-formation for disrupted progenitors. We find the likelihood…
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