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We use a semi-analytical model for the substructure of dark matter haloes to assess the too-big-to-fail (TBTF) problem. The model accurately reproduces the average subhalo mass and velocity functions, as well as their halo-to-halo variance, in N-body simulations. We construct thousands of realizations of Milky Way (MW) size host haloes, allowing us to investigate the TBTF problem with unprecedented statistical power. We examine the dependence on host halo mass and cosmology, and explicitly demonstrate that a reliable assessment of TBTF requires large samples of hundreds of host haloes. We argue that previous statistics used to address TBTF suffer from the look-elsewhere effect and/or disregard certain aspects of the data on the MW satellite population. We devise a new statistic that is not hampered by these shortcomings, and, using only data on the 9 known MW satellite galaxies with $V_{rm max}>15{rm kms}^{-1}$, demonstrate that $1.4^{+3.3}_{-1.1}%$ of MW-size host haloes have a subhalo population in statistical agreement with that of the MW. However, when using data on the MW satellite galaxies down to $V_{rm max}=8{rm kms}^{-1}$, this MW consistent fraction plummets to $<5times10^{-4}$ (at 68% CL). Hence, if it turns out that the inventory of MW satellite galaxies is complete down to 8km/s, then the maximum circular velocities of MW satellites are utterly inconsistent with $Lambda$CDM predictions, unless baryonic effects can drastically increase the spread in $V_{rm max}$ values of satellite galaxies compared to that of their subhaloes.
We use the Arecibo legacy fast ALFA (ALFALFA) 21cm survey to measure the number density of galaxies as a function of their rotational velocity, $V_mathrm{rot,HI}$ (as inferred from the width of their 21cm emission line). Based on the measured velocit
The faintness of satellite systems in galaxy groups has contributed to the widely discussed missing satellite and too big to fail issues. Using techniques based on Tremaine & Richstone (1977), we show that there is no problem with the luminosity func
Recent studies have established that extreme dwarf galaxies --whether satellites or field objects-- suffer from the so called too big to fail (TBTF) problem. Put simply, the TBTF problem consists of the fact that it is difficult to explain both the m
N-body dark matter simulations of structure formation in the $Lambda$CDM model predict a population of subhalos within Galactic halos that have higher central densities than inferred for satellites of the Milky Way, a tension known as the `too big to
Solomon and Golo [1] have recently proposed an autocatalytic (self-reinforcing) feedback model which couples a macroscopic system parameter (the interest rate), a microscopic parameter that measures the distribution of the states of the individual ag