The Role of Dwarf Galaxy Interactions in Shaping the Magellanic System and Implications for Magellanic Irregulars
Gurtina Besla (Columbia), Nitya Kallivayalil (Yale), Lars Hernquist, (Harvard CfA), Roeland P. van der Marel (STScI), T.J. Cox (Carnegie, Observatories), Dusan Keres (Berkeley)

TL;DR
This paper uses numerical models to show that interactions between the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds explain their irregular morphology and kinematics, supporting a first infall scenario and highlighting the importance of dwarf-dwarf interactions in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
The study introduces new numerical models demonstrating that LMC-SMC interactions alone can explain observed features, challenging the necessity of MW interactions.
Findings
Magellanic Stream is caused by LMC tides on SMC before MW accretion.
LMC-SMC collision explains the LMC's warped stellar bar and spiral.
Dwarf-dwarf interactions influence the morphology of Magellanic Irregulars.
Abstract
We present a novel pair of numerical models of the interaction history between the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC, respectively) and our Milky Way (MW) in light of recent high precision proper motions (Kallivayalil et al. 2006a,b). Given the new velocities, cosmological simulations of structure formation favor a scenario where the Magellanic Clouds (MCs) are currently on their first infall towards our Galaxy (Boylan-Kolchin et al. 2011, Busha et al. 2011). We illustrate here that the observed irregular morphology and internal kinematics of the MCs (in gas and stars) are naturally explained by interactions between the LMC and SMC, rather than gravitational interactions with the MW. This picture further supports a first infall scenario (Besla et a. 2007). In particular, we demonstrate that the Magellanic Stream, a band of HI gas trailing behind the MCs 150 degrees across…
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