LMC Calls, Milky Way Halo Answers: Disentangling the Effects of the MW--LMC Interaction on Stellar Stream Populations
The infall of the LMC into the Milky Way (MW) has dynamical implications throughout the MW's dark matter halo. We study the impact of this merger on the statistical properties of populations of simulated stellar streams. Specifically, we investigate the radial and on-sky angular dependence of s...
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
03.10.2024
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | The infall of the LMC into the Milky Way (MW) has dynamical implications
throughout the MW's dark matter halo. We study the impact of this merger on the
statistical properties of populations of simulated stellar streams.
Specifically, we investigate the radial and on-sky angular dependence of stream
perturbations caused by the direct effect of stream-LMC interactions and/or the
response of the MW dark matter halo. We use a time-evolving MW--LMC simulation
described by basis function expansions to simulate streams. We quantify the
degree of perturbation using a set of stream property statistics including the
misalignment of proper motions with the stream track. In the outer halo, direct
stream--LMC interactions produce a statistically significant effect, boosting
the fraction of misaligned proper motions by ~25% compared to the model with no
LMC. Moreover, there is on-sky angular dependence of stream perturbations:~the
highest fractions of perturbed streams coincide with the same on-sky quadrant
as the present-day LMC location. In the inner halo, the MW halo dipole response
primarily drives stream perturbations, but it remains uncertain whether this is
a detectable signature distinct from the LMC's influence. For the fiducial
MW--LMC model, we find agreement between the predicted fraction of streams with
significantly misaligned proper motions, $\bar{\vartheta}>10^{\circ}$, and Dark
Energy Survey data. Finally, we predict this fraction for the Vera Rubin Large
Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) footprint. Using LSST data will improve our
constraints on dark matter models and LMC properties as it is sensitive to
both. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.02574 |