4.7 Article

FOSSIL REMNANTS OF REIONIZATION IN THE HALO OF THE MILKY WAY

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 689, Issue 1, Pages L41-L44

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/595814

Keywords

cosmology: theory; dark matter; galaxies: dwarf; galaxies: formation; galaxies: halos

Funding

  1. NASA [HST-AR-11268.01-A1, NNX08AV68G]
  2. Hubble Fellowship [HST-HF01194.01]
  3. William L. Loughlin Fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Study
  4. NASA [NNX08AV68G, 94867] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Our recently completed one billion particle Via Lactea II simulation of a Milky Way-sized dark matter halo resolves over 50,000 gravitationally bound clumps orbiting today within the virialized region of the main host. About 2300 of these subhalos have one or more progenitors with M > 10(6) M-circle dot at redshift z = 11, i.e., massive enough for their gas to have cooled via excitation of H-2 and fragmented prior to the epoch of cosmic reionization. We count 4500 such progenitors: if these were able to convert a fraction of their gas content into very metalpoor stars with a Salpeter initial mass function (IMF), they would be shining today with a visual magnitude M-v = 6.7 per solar mass in stars. Assuming a universal baryon fraction, we show that mean star formation efficiencies as low as 0.1% in progenitors << 10(8) M-circle dot would overproduce the abundance of the faint Galactic dwarf spheroidals observed by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Star formation at first light must either have occurred with an IMF lacking stars below 0.9 M-circle dot, or was intrinsically very inefficient in small dark matter halos. If the latter, our results may be viewed as another hint that there is a minimum scale in galaxy formation.

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