Clues to the "Magellanic Galaxy" from Cosmological Simulations
Laura V. Sales, Julio F. Navarro, Andrew P. Cooper, Simon D. M. White,, Carlos S. Frenk, Amina Helmi

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to investigate the orbital history of the Large Magellanic Cloud, predicting its past associations with Milky Way satellites and providing insights into their current dynamical states.
Contribution
It identifies potential past associations of the LMC with MW satellites through simulation analogs and proposes new methods to test these associations with proper motion data.
Findings
The LMC may not be on its first approach to the MW.
Most potential LMC associates are close if on first approach.
Only the Small Magellanic Cloud is clearly associated with the LMC.
Abstract
We use cosmological simulations from the Aquarius Project to study the orbital history of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) and its potential association with other satellites of the Milky Way (MW). We search for dynamical analogs to the LMC and find a subhalo that matches the LMC position and velocity at either of its two most recent pericentric passages. This suggests that the LMC is not necessarily on its first approach to the MW, provided that the virial mass of the Milky Way is M_200 ~1.8e12 M_sun. The simulation results yield specific predictions for the position and velocity of systems associated with the LMC prior to infall. If on first approach, most should lie close to the LMC because the Galactic tidal field has not yet had enough time to disperse them. If on second approach, the list of potential associates increases substantially. Interestingly, our analysis rules out an LMC…
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