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The APOSTLE simulations: solutions to the Local Group's cosmic puzzles

Authors
Till Sawala,Carlos S. Frenk
Azadeh Fattahi,Julio Fortanete Navarro,Richard G. Bower,Robert A. Crain,Claudio dalla Vecchia,Michelle Furlong,John. C. Helly,Adrian Jenkins,Kyle A. Oman Matthieu Schaller,Joop Schaye,Tom Theuns,James W. Trayford,Simon D. M. White Institute for Computational Cosmology,Department of Engineering Physics,University of Durham,University of Helsinki,University of Victoria Senior CIfAR Fellow,Astrophysics Research Institute,Liverpool John Moores University,Instituto de Astrof'isica de Canarias,Departamento de Astrofiisica,Universidad de la Laguna,Leiden Observatory,Leiden University,Max-Planck Institute for Astrophysics,Carlos Frenk,Julio Navarro,R. Bower,Robert Crain,Claudio Vecchia,John Helly,Kyle Oman,Matthieu Schaller,James Trayford
+34 authors
,Simon White
Published
Feb 5, 2016
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Abstract

The Local Group of galaxies offer some of the most discriminating tests of models of cosmic structure formation. For example, observations of the Milky Way (MW) and Andromeda satellite populations appear to be in disagreement with N-body simulations of the "Lambda Cold Dark Matter" ({\Lambda}CDM) model: there are far fewer satellite galaxies than substructures in cold dark matter halos (the "missing satellites" problem); dwarf galaxies seem to avoid the most massive substructures (the "too-big-to-fail" problem); and the brightest satellites appear to orbit their host galaxies on a thin plane (the "planes of satellites" problem). Here we present results from APOSTLE (A Project Of Simulating The Local Environment), a suite of cosmological hydrodynamic simulations of twelve volumes selected to match the kinematics of the Local Group (LG) members. Applying the Eagle code to the LG environment, we find that our simulations match the observed abundance of LG galaxies, including the satellite galaxies of the MW and Andromeda. Due to changes to the structure of halos and the evolution in the LG environment, the simulations reproduce the observed relation between stellar mass and velocity dispersion of individual dwarf spheroidal galaxies without necessitating the formation of cores in their dark matter profiles. Satellite systems form with a range of spatial anisotropies, including one similar to that of the MW, confirming that such a configuration is not unexpected in {\Lambda}CDM. Finally, based on the observed velocity dispersion, size, and stellar mass, we provide new estimates of the maximum circular velocity for the halos of nine MW dwarf spheroidals.

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