The Formation of the Local Group Planes of Galaxies
Ed J. Shaya, R. Brent Tully

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origins of the thin, planar arrangements of satellite galaxies in the Local Group, using numerical methods to explore their formation through cosmic structures and galaxy interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel combination of Numerical Action methods and backward integration to model the formation of Local Group planes, linking their origins to large-scale cosmic flows.
Findings
Planes formed from early filamentary structures chasing M31
Proper motion constraints limit plausible orbital solutions
Local Void evacuation influenced the formation of planar structures
Abstract
The confinement of most satellite galaxies in the Local Group to thin planes presents a challenge to the theory of hierarchical galaxy clustering. The PAndAS collaboration has identified a particularly thin configuration with kinematic coherence among companions of M31 and there have been long standing claims that the dwarf companions to the Milky Way lie in a plane roughly orthogonal to the disk of our galaxy. This discussion investigates the possible origins of four Local Group planes: the plane similar, but not identical to that identified by PAndAS, an adjacent slightly tilted plane, and two planes near the Milky Way: one with nearer galaxies and the other with more distant ones. Plausible orbits are found by using a combination of Numerical Action methods and a backward in time integration procedure. For M31, M33, IC10, and LeoI, solutions are found that are consistent with…
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