Simulated {\Lambda}CDM analogues of the thin Plane of Satellites around the Andromeda galaxy are not kinematically coherent structures
Tobias Buck, Aaron A. Dutton, Andrea V. Macci\`o

TL;DR
Simulated analogues of the Andromeda satellite plane in {\
Contribution
This study demonstrates that simulated satellite planes are transient and not kinematically coherent, challenging the interpretation of observed planar structures as stable features.
Findings
Planes are common in high concentration haloes.
Line-of-sight velocity is unreliable for kinematic coherence.
Planes are transient, with only ~30% chance of aligned satellites.
Abstract
A large fraction of the dwarf satellites orbiting the Andromeda galaxy are surprisingly aligned in a thin, extended and apparently kinematically coherent planar structure. Such a structure is not easily found in simulations based on the Cold Dark Matter model ({\Lambda}CDM). Using 21 high resolution cosmological simulations we analyse the kinematics of planes of satellites similar to the one around Andromeda. We find good agreement when co-rotation is characterized by the line-of-sight velocity. At the same time, when co-rotation is inferred by the angular momenta of the satellites, the planes are in agreement with the plane around our Galaxy. We find such planes to be common in our high concentration haloes. The number of co-rotating satellites obtained from the sign of the line-of-sight velocity shows large variations depending on the viewing angle and is consistent with that obtained…
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