The Magellanic Stream: break up and accretion onto the hot Galactic corona
Thor Tepper-Garcia, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, and Ralph S. Sutherland

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origin of bright H-alpha emission in the Magellanic Stream, proposing a shock cascade model interacting with the Galactic hot corona, and constrains the Stream's distance and coronal density.
Contribution
It revisits and refines the shock cascade model for the Magellanic Stream's ionization, providing new constraints on the Galactic corona's density and the Stream's distance.
Findings
Bright H-alpha emission can be explained by shock cascade at certain coronal densities.
The Stream's mean distance is constrained to less than 75 kpc based on the model.
If the Stream is farther, alternative ionization mechanisms may be needed.
Abstract
The Magellanic HI Stream (~2x10^9 Msun [d/55 kpc]^2) encircling the Galaxy at a distance 'd' is arguably the most important tracer of what happens to gas accreting onto a disk galaxy. Recent observations reveal that the Stream's mass is in fact dominated (3:1) by its ionised component. Here we revisit the origin of the mysterious H-alpha recombination emission observed along much of its length that is overly bright (~150-200 milli-Rayleigh) for the known Galactic ultraviolet background (~20-40 mR / [d/55 kpc]^2). In an earlier model, we proposed that a slow shock cascade was operating along the Stream due to its interaction with the extended Galactic hot corona. We find that, for a smooth coronal density profile, this model can explain the bright H-alpha emission if the coronal density satisfies 2 < (n / 10^{-4} cm^{-3}) < 4 at d = 55 kpc. But in view of updated parameters for the…
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