1511.01484
How the first stars shaped the faintest gas-dominated dwarf galaxies
Verbeke, Vandenbroucke, De Rijcke
Low-mass dwarf galaxies are very sensitive test-beds for theories of cosmic structure formation since their weak gravitational fields allow the effects of the relevant physical processes to clearly stand out. Up to now, no unified account exists of the sometimes seemingly conflicting properties of the faintest isolated dwarfs in and around the Local Group, such as Leo T and the recently discovered Leo P and Pisces A systems. Using new numerical simulations, show that this serious challenge to the understanding of galaxy formation can be effectively resolved by taking into account the regulating influence of the UV radiation of the first population of stars on a dwarf's star formation rate while otherwise staying within the standard cosmo paradigm for structure formation. These simulations produce faint, gas-dominated, star-forming dwarf galaxies that lie on the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation and that successfully reproduce a broad range of chemical, kinematical, and structural observables of real late-type dwarf galaxies. Furthermore, stress the importance of obtaining properties of simulated galaxies in a manner as close as possible to the typically employed observational techniques.
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