Origin of structural and kinematical properties of the Small Magellanic Cloud
Kenji Bekki, Masashi Chiba

TL;DR
This study uses chemodynamical simulations to explore the origin of the Small Magellanic Cloud's structural, kinematical, and chemical properties, revealing how interactions shape its stellar and gas distributions over the last 3 billion years.
Contribution
It introduces a new dwarf spheroidal model for the SMC and demonstrates how interactions with the LMC and Galaxy influence its properties and formation of features like the Magellanic stream.
Findings
Old stars form a spherical distribution with slow rotation.
New stars show significant rotation and a negative metallicity gradient.
HI gas exhibits high velocity dispersions and a rotating disk.
Abstract
We investigate structural, kinematical, and chemical properties of stars and gas in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) interacting with the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) and the Galaxy based on a series of self-consistent chemodynamical simulations. We adopt a new "dwarf spheroidal model" in which the SMC initially has both old stars with a spherical spatial distribution and an extended HI gas disk. We mainly investigate SMC's evolution for the last 3 Gyr within which the Magellanic stream (MS) and the Magellanic bridge (MB) can be formed as a result of the LMC-SMC-Galaxy interaction. Our principal results, which can be tested against observations, are as follows. The final spatial distribution of the old stars projected onto the sky is spherical even after the strong LMC-SMC-Galaxy interaction, whereas that of the new ones is significantly flattened and appears to form a bar structure.…
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