Dark Matter Substructure and Dwarf Galactic Satellites
A decade ago cosmological simulations of increasingly higher resolution were used to demonstrate that virialized regions of Cold Dark Matter (CDM) halos are filled with a multitude of dense, gravitationally bound clumps. These dark...
Main Author: | |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Hindawi Limited
2010-01-01
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Series: | Advances in Astronomy |
Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2010/281913 |
Summary: | A decade ago cosmological simulations of
increasingly higher resolution were used to
demonstrate that virialized regions of Cold Dark
Matter (CDM) halos are filled with a multitude 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 Milky Way 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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ISSN: | 1687-7969 1687-7977 |