A Population of Accreted SMC Stars in the LMC
Knut A.G. Olsen, Dennis Zaritsky, Robert D. Blum, Martha L. Boyer, and, Karl D. Gordon

TL;DR
This study analyzes the stellar kinematics of the Large Magellanic Cloud using various stellar tracers, revealing a population of accreted stars likely originating from the Small Magellanic Cloud, linked to HI arms and distinct in metallicity.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed kinematic and metallicity analysis of accreted SMC stars in the LMC, linking stellar populations to HI features and their origin.
Findings
Identified a population of >5% of stars with opposing rotation velocities.
Measured a rotation curve with v_0=87 km/s beyond 2.4 kpc.
Found metallicity differences indicating SMC origin for the accreted stars.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the stellar kinematics of the Large Magellanic Cloud based on ~5900 new and existing velocities of massive red supergiants, oxygen-rich and carbon-rich AGB stars, and other giants. After correcting the line-of-sight velocities for the LMC's space motion and accounting for asymmetric drift in the AGB population, we derive a rotation curve that is consistent with all of the tracers used, as well as that of published HI data. The amplitude of the rotation curve is v_0=87+/-5 km s^-1 beyond a radius R_0=2.4+/-0.1 kpc, and has a position angle of the kinematic line of nodes of theta=142 degrees +/-5 degrees. By examining the outliers from our fits, we identify a population of 376 stars, or >~5% of our sample, that have line-of-sight velocities that apparently oppose the sense of rotation of the LMC disk. We find that these kinematically distinct stars are either…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
