In this paper, we study the chemical properties of the stars in the dwarf
satellites around the MW-like host galaxies, and explore the possible effects
of several baryonic processes, including supernova (SN) feedback, the
reionization of the universe and H2β cooling, on them and how current and
future observations may put some constraints on these processes. We use a
semi-analytical model to generate MW-like galaxies, for which a fiducial model
can reproduce the luminosity function and the stellar metallicity--stellar mass
correlation of the MW dwarfs. Using the simulated MW-like galaxies, we focus on
investigating three metallicity properties of their dwarfs: the stellar
metallicity--stellar mass correlation of the dwarf population, and the
metal-poor and metal-rich tails of the stellar metallicity distribution in
individual dwarfs. We find that (1) the slope of the stellar
metallicity--stellar mass correlation is sensitive to the SN feedback strength
and the reionization epoch; (2) the extension of the metal-rich tails is mainly
sensitive to the SN feedback strength; (3) the extension of the metal-poor
tails is mainly sensitive to the reionization epoch; (4) none of the three
chemical properties are sensitive to the H2β cooling process; and (5)
comparison of our model results with the current observational slope of the
stellar metallicity--stellar mass relation suggests that the local universe is
reionized earlier than the cosmic average and local sources may have a
significant contribution to the reionization in the local region, and an
intermediate to strong SN feedback strength is preferred. Future observations
of metal-rich and metal-poor tails of stellar metallicity distributions will
put further constraints on the SN feedback and the reionization processes.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa