The vast thin plane of M31 co-rotating dwarfs: an additional fossil signature of the M31 merger and of its considerable impact in the whole Local Group
Fran\c{c}ois Hammer (1), Yanbin Yang (1,2), Sylvain Fouquet (1),, Marcel S. Pawlowski (3), Pavel Kroupa (3), Mathieu Puech (1), Hector Flores, (1), Jianling Wang (2) ((1) Laboratoire GEPI, Observatoire de Paris, France, (2) National Astronomical Observatoires

TL;DR
This paper suggests that the vast thin disk of satellites around M31 and other structures in the Local Group are likely remnants of a major ancient merger involving M31, providing a unified explanation for multiple observed features.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking M31's ancient merger to the formation of its satellite structures and the Local Group's features, offering a new interpretation of their origins.
Findings
VTDS coincides with stellar streams and the Giant Stream
Model reproduces positions and velocities of M31's dwarf satellites
Proposes a common tidal tail origin for multiple structures
Abstract
The recent discovery by Ibata et al. (2013) of a vast thin disk of satellites (VTDS) around M31 offers a new challenge for the understanding of the Local Group properties. This comes in addition to the unexpected proximity of the Magellanic Clouds (MCs) to the Milky Way (MW), and to another vast polar structure (VPOS), which is almost perpendicular to our Galaxy disk. We find that the VTDS plane is coinciding with several stellar, tidally-induced streams in the outskirts of M31, and, that its velocity distribution is consistent with that of the Giant Stream (GS). This is suggestive of a common physical mechanism, likely linked to merger tidal interactions, knowing that a similar argument may apply to the VPOS at the MW location. Furthermore, the VTDS is pointing towards the MW, being almost perpendicular to the MW disk, as the VPOS is. We compare these properties to the modelling of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
