4.7 Article

WHERE ARE THE FOSSILS OF THE FIRST GALAXIES? II. TRUE FOSSILS, GHOST HALOS, AND THE MISSING BRIGHT SATELLITES

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 741, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/741/1/18

Keywords

dark matter; galaxies: dwarf; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: formation; Local Group

Funding

  1. NASA [NNX07AH10G, NNX10AH10G]
  2. NASA [133039, NNX10AH10G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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We use a new set of cold dark matter simulations of the local universe to investigate the distribution of fossils of primordial dwarf galaxies within and around the Milky Way. Throughout, we build upon previous results showing agreement between the observed stellar properties of a subset of the ultra-faint dwarfs and our simulated fossils. Here, we show that fossils of the first galaxies have galactocentric distributions and cumulative luminosity functions consistent with observations. In our model, we predict similar to 300 luminous satellites orbiting the Milky Way, 50%-70% of which are well-preserved fossils. Within the Milky Way virial radius, the majority of these fossils have luminosities L-V < 10(6) L-circle dot. Despite our multidimensional agreement with observations at low masses and luminosities, the primordial model produces an overabundance of bright dwarf satellites (L-V > 10(4) L-circle dot) with respect to observations where observations are nearly complete. The bright satellite problem is most evident in the outer parts of the Milky Way. We estimate that, although relatively bright, the primordial stellar populations are very diffuse, producing a population with surface brightnesses below surveys' detection limits, and are easily stripped by tidal forces. Although we cannot yet present unmistakable evidence for the existence of the fossils of first galaxies in the Local Group, the results of our studies suggest observational strategies that may demonstrate their existence: (1) the detection of ghost halos of primordial stars around isolated dwarfs would prove that stars formed in minihalos (M < 10(8) M-circle dot) before reionization and strongly suggest that at least a fraction of the ultra-faint dwarfs are fossils of the first galaxies; and (2) the existence of a yet unknown population of similar to 150 Milky Way ultra-faints with half-light radii r(hl) approximate to 100-1000 pc and luminosities L-V < 10(4) L-circle dot, detectable by future deep surveys. These undetected dwarfs would have the mass-to-light ratios, stellar velocity dispersions, and metallicities predicted in this work.

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