Next: Introduction
Effect of the Milky Way on Magellanic Cloud structure
Martin D. Weinberg
Department of Physics & Astronomy
University of Massachusetts
Amherst, MA 01003-4525, USA
Abstract:
A combination of analytic models and n-body simulations implies that
the structural evolution of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is
dominated by its dynamical interaction with the Milky Way. Although
expected at some level, the scope of the involvement has significant
observational consequences. First, LMC disk orbits are torqued out
of the disk plane, thickening the disk and populating a spheroid.
The torque results from direct forcing by the Milky Way tide and,
indirectly, from the drag between the LMC disk and its halo
resulting from the induced precession of the LMC disk. The latter
is a newly reported mechanism that can affect all satellite
interations. However, the overall torque can not isotropize the
stellar orbits and their kinematics remains disk-like. Such a
kinematic signature is observed for nearly all LMC populations. The
extended disk distribution is predicted to increase the microlensing
toward the LMC. Second, the disk's binding energy slowly decreases
during this process, puffing up and priming the outer regions for
subsequent tidal stripping. Because the tidally stripped debris
will be spatially extended, the distribution of stripped stars is
much more extended than the HI Magellanic Stream. This is
consistent with upper limits to stellar densities in the gas stream
and suggests a different strategy for detecting the stripped stars.
And, finally, the mass loss over several LMC orbits is predicted by
n-body simulation and the debris extends to tens of kiloparsecs from
the tidal boundary. Although the overall space density of the
stripped stars is low, possible existence of such intervening
populations have been recently reported and may be detectable using
2MASS.
Next: Introduction
Martin Weinberg
1999-05-24