# The Magellanic System: the puzzle of the leading gas stream

**Authors:** Thor Tepper-Garc\'ia, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Marcel S. Pawlowski, and, Tobias K. Fritz

arXiv: 1901.05636 · 2019-06-26

## TL;DR

This study examines the formation of the Magellanic Stream and Leading Arm, revealing that the hot Galactic corona inhibits the Leading Arm's formation, challenging previous tidal models and suggesting alternative origins or properties of the corona.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a Galactic model with a weakly magnetized, spinning hot corona, showing its impact on the formation of gaseous features around the Magellanic Clouds.

## Key findings

- The Magellanic Stream's location and extension are consistent with previous models.
- The hot corona inhibits the formation of the Leading Arm in the models.
- Two alternative explanations for the Leading Arm are proposed, involving corona density or a different origin.

## Abstract

The Magellanic Clouds (MCs) are the most massive gas-bearing systems falling into the Galaxy at the present epoch. They show clear signs of interaction, manifested in particular by the Magellanic Stream, a spectacular gaseous wake that trails from the MCs extending more than 150 degree across the sky. Ahead of the MCs is the "Leading Arm" usually interpreted as the tidal counterpart of the Magellanic Stream, an assumption we now call into question. We revisit the formation of these gaseous features in a first-infall scenario, including for the first time a Galactic model with a weakly magnetised, spinning hot corona. In agreement with previous studies, we broadly recover the location and the extension of the Stream on the sky. In contrast, we find that the formation of the Leading Arm -- that is otherwise present in models without a corona -- is inhibited by the hydrodynamic interaction with the hot component. These results hold with or without coronal rotation or a weak, ambient magnetic field. Since the existence of the hot corona is well established, we are led to two possible interpretations: (i) the Leading Arm survives because the coronal density beyond 20 kpc is a factor of 10 lower than required by conventional spheroidal coronal x-ray models, consistent with recent claims of rapid coronal rotation; or (ii) the `Leading Arm' is cool gas trailing from a frontrunner, a satellite moving ahead of the MCs, consistent with its higher metallicity compared to the trailing stream. Both scenarios raise issues that we discuss.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.05636/full.md

## Figures

101 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.05636/full.md

## References

160 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.05636/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.05636