4.1 Review

Dark Matter Substructure and Dwarf Galactic Satellites

期刊

ADVANCES IN ASTRONOMY
卷 2010, 期 -, 页码 -

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HINDAWI LTD
DOI: 10.1155/2010/281913

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资金

  1. NSF [AST-0507666, AST-0708154]
  2. Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics at the University of Chicago [NSF PHY-0551142]
  3. Kavli Foundation

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A decade ago cosmological simulations of increasingly higher resolution were used to demonstrate that virialized regions of Cold DarkMatter (CDM) halos are filled with amultitude of dense, gravitationally bound clumps. These dark matter subhalos are central regions of halos that survived strong gravitational tidal forces and dynamical friction during the hierarchical sequence of merging and accretion via which the CDM halos form. Comparisons with observations revealed that there is a glaring discrepancy between abundance of subhalos and luminous satellites of the MilkyWay and Andromeda as a function of their circular velocity or bound mass within a fixed aperture. This large discrepancy, which became known as the substructure or the missing satellites problem, begs for an explanation. In this paper, the author reviews the progress made during the last several years both in quantifying the problem and in exploring possible scenarios in which it could be accommodated and explained in the context of galaxy formation in the framework of the CDM paradigm of structure formation. In particular, he shows that the observed luminosity function, radial distribution, and the remarkable similarity of the inner density profiles of luminous satellites can be understood within hierarchical CDM framework using a simple model in which efficiency of star formation monotonically decreases with decreasing virial mass satellites had before their accretion without any actual sharp galaxy formation threshold.

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