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Be it therefore resolved: Cosmological Simulations of Dwarf Galaxies with Extreme Resolution

Authors :
Wheeler, Coral
Hopkins, Philip F.
Pace, Andrew B.
Garrison-Kimmel, Shea
Boylan-Kolchin, Michael
Wetzel, Andrew
Bullock, James S.
Keres, Dusan
Faucher-Giguere, Claude-Andre
Quataert, Eliot
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
arXiv, 2018.

Abstract

We study a suite of extremely high-resolution cosmological FIRE simulations of dwarf galaxies ($M_{\rm halo} \lesssim 10^{10}$$M_{\odot}$), run to $z=0$ with $30 M_{\odot}$ resolution, sufficient (for the first time) to resolve the internal structure of individual supernovae remnants within the cooling radius. Every halo with $M_{\rm halo} \gtrsim 10^{8.6} M_{\odot}$ is populated by a resolved {\em stellar} galaxy, suggesting very low-mass dwarfs may be ubiquitous in the field. Our ultra-faint dwarfs (UFDs; $M_{\ast}10^{5} M_{\odot}$) continue forming stars to $z 10^{-4}$ to form a dark matter core $>200$pc, while lower-mass UFDs exhibit cusps down to $\lesssim100$pc, as expected from energetic arguments. Our dwarfs with $M_{\ast}>10^{4}\,M_{\odot}$ have half-mass radii ($R_{\rm 1/2}$) in agreement with Local Group (LG) dwarfs; dynamical mass vs. $R_{1/2}$ and the degree of rotational support also resemble observations. The lowest-mass UFDs are below surface brightness limits of current surveys but are potentially visible in next-generation surveys (e.g. LSST). The stellar metallicities are lower than in LG dwarfs; this may reflect pre-enrichment of the LG by the massive hosts or Pop-III stars. Consistency with lower resolution studies implies that our simulations are numerically robust (for a given physical model).<br />14 pages; 9 figures; 1 table; submitted to MNRAS

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....03e9ef28280983ebbaf90569613b3c94
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1812.02749