Research Division Seminar
What do the neighbors look like? A comparative look at the Milky Way and Andromeda dwarf galaxies

Dr. Nicolas Martin

Abstract

Dwarf galaxies are powerful tools of near-field cosmology and galactic archaeology: their numbers, distribution, and star formation can be linked to both the tenets of LCDM (the missing satellite "problem," their (an)isotropic distribution, their dark matter content) and to the build up of their hosts and their environment (accretion, quenching). The exquisite detail offered by observation of the nearby Milky Way dwarf galaxies has built a picture of what dwarf galaxies are and how they evolved through time. In this talk, I will review the increasingly sharp view we are building of the dwarf-galaxy system of the Milky Way's "sister" galaxy, Andromeda, and emphasize key similarities and differences between these two systems of satellites in the hope to learn what features are common or, on the contrary, driven by the different pasts of the Milky Way and Andromeda.

About the talk

What do the neighbors look like? A comparative look at the Milky Way and Andromeda dwarf galaxies
Dr. Nicolas Martin
Observatoire Astronomique de Strasbourg
Tuesday February 14, 2023 - 12:30 GMT  (Aula)
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