Tidal Effects on the Spatial Structure of the Local Group
Stefano Pasetto, Cesare Chiosi

TL;DR
This paper investigates how external tidal forces influence the planar spatial distribution of dwarf galaxies in the Local Group, supporting previous geometric findings and explaining the physical mechanisms behind this structure.
Contribution
It analytically demonstrates that external tidal forces can account for the observed planar distribution of LG dwarf galaxies, extending prior geometric studies.
Findings
External tidal forces can cause dwarf galaxies to align in a plane.
The planar distribution is compatible with the external force field.
Tidal interactions can lead to both stripping and flattening of galaxy distributions.
Abstract
The spatial distribution of galaxies in the Local Group (LG) is the footprint of its formation mechanism and the gravitational interactions among its members and the external massive galaxies or galaxy groups. Recently, Pasetto & Chiosi (2007), using a 3D-geometrical description of the spatial distribution of all the members of the LG (not only the satellites of the MW and M31) based on present-day data on positions and distances, found that all galaxies (MW, M31, their satellites, and even the most distant objects) are confined within a slab of about 200 kpc thickness. Examining how external galaxies or groups would gravitationally affect (and eventually alter) the planar structure (and its temporal evolution) of the LG, they found that the external force field acts parallel to the plane determined by geometry and studied this with the Least Action Principle. In this paper, we have…
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